ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
Title
Jorge Carrera Andrade Collection
Collection Number
SC 202
OCLC Number
122687666
Creator
Jorge Carrera Andrade, 1903-1978
Provenance
The collection was purchased from Jorge Carrera Andrade in 1969 at the suggestion
of Dr. Enrique Ojeda (1928-2023), a distinguished Ecuadorian writer, scholar, and
academic known for his contributions to Latin American literature, particularly the
study of Ecuador’s leading 20th‑century authors.
Extent, Scope, and Content Note
The Jorge Carrera Andrade Collection (SC 202) comprises 15 linear ft. of archival
materials documenting the life and work of Jorge Carrera Andrade (1902-1978), an influential
Ecuadorian poet, essayist, and diplomat. The collection spans from 1923 to 1970 and
includes correspondence, manuscripts, personal and business letters, postcards, typescripts,
corrected holographs, and extensive press clippings and reviews in multiple languages
(Spanish, French, English, German, Italian, Czech) reflecting his global career and
literary impact.
The archive’s strengths lie in:
-
- Creative process documentation: handwritten drafts, corrected typescripts, and autobiographical
writings reveal how Andrade shaped his poetry.
- Literary and cultural networks: personal correspondence connects Andrade to major
literary figures and shows the movement of ideas across continents.
- Historical and cultural context: press clippings and journal reviews document how his career as poet and diplomat was received internationally.
- Creative process documentation: handwritten drafts, corrected typescripts, and autobiographical
writings reveal how Andrade shaped his poetry.
Because of these facets, the collection is a rich resource for scholars of Latin American literature, diplomacy, modernism, translation studies, and cultural history.
While the collection centers on Carrera Andrade’s own materials, his extensive correspondence
features interactions with a wide network of 20th‑century literary and cultural figures.
These connections underscore his role in transnational literary exchange. Correspondents
include:
-
- Pablo Neruda: Chilean Nobel‑Prize-winning poet; Carrera Andrade corresponded or was
associated via literary networks.
- Gabriela Mistral: Chilean poet and Nobel Laureate whose early endorsement and association
helped shape Latin American literary modernism.
- Alfonso Reyes: Prominent Mexican essayist and diplomat, another central figure in
20th‑century Hispanic letters, often linked in Carrera Andrade’s literary circles.
- Muna Lee: American poet and translator whose English translations helped introduce
Carrera Andrade’s work to U.S. readers.
- Archibald MacLeish and William Carlos Williams: Major U.S. literary modernists who praised or engaged with his work.
- Pablo Neruda: Chilean Nobel‑Prize-winning poet; Carrera Andrade corresponded or was
associated via literary networks.
Arrangement and Processing Note
Files arranged alphabetically by subject. Re-processed by Kristen J. Nyitray. Last updated: March 2026.
The collection was re-processed to improve accuracy, organization, and accessibility. Variations in name spellings, titles, and other metadata were standardized to ensure consistent cataloging. Materials were also rearranged and described more systematically, making it easier for researchers to navigate the collection and locate specific items. These changes enhance both discoverability and scholarly usability, allowing users to engage more efficiently with the collection’s rich literary, diplomatic, and historical materials.
Series 1: Correspondence (boxes 1-19): Jorge Carrera Andrade bound his personal and business letters, postcards, and telegrams from friends, poets, admirers, editors, translators and publishers in nine volumes. These volumes have been disbound and the letters have been sorted alphabetically, then chronologically.
Series 2: Manuscripts (boxes 20-21): autobiographical materials, typescripts, and corrected holographs.
Series 3: Albums (boxes 22-35): newspaper and literary journal reviews, news notes, publishers and press notices, advertisements, and dust jackets documenting Jorge Carrera Andrade's literary, diplomatic, and political careers. Many of the clippings are unidentified and undated, and are primarily in Spanish, with some others in French, English, German, Italian, and Czech. 17 bound volumes (circa 1923-1967).
Language(s)
Spanish, French, English, German, Italian, and Czech.
Restrictions on Access
The collection is open to researchers without restriction.
Rights and Permissions
Stony Brook University Libraries’ consent to access as the physical owner of the collection
does not address copyright issues that may affect publication rights. It is the sole
responsibility of the user of Special Collections and University Archives materials
to investigate the copyright status of any given work and to seek and obtain permission
where needed prior to publication.
Citation
[Item], [Box], Jorge Carrera Andrade Collection, Special Collections and University
Archives, Stony Brook University Libraries.
Biographical Note
Poet, essayist, and diplomat Jorge Carrera Andrade (1902-1978) was born in Quito,
Ecuador, on September 18, 1902, the son of Abelardo Carrera Andrade and Carmen Vaca
Andrade. He received his early education at the Juan Montalvo Normal Institute and
the Mejía National Institute, before pursuing higher studies at the Faculty of Law,
University of Quito, Ecuador; the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, University of
Barcelona, Spain; and the Faculty of Philosophy, Aix-en-Provence, France, ultimately
earning a bachelor’s degree and a licentiate in social sciences.
As a diplomat in Ecuador’s foreign service and an occasional expatriate living abroad, Carrera Andrade traveled widely, documenting his observations in numerous essays. An eminent poet, he was known for his brief, imagistic poems that convey a profound empathy for the human condition. He also translated the works of other authors into Spanish and adapted Japanese haiku into a distinctive form called micrograma. Later in his career, he taught at Stony Brook University in the Department of Romance Languages in 1970 and 1972. Jorge Carrera Andrade died on November 7, 1978. According to the Poetry Foundation, Jorge Carrera Andrade is recognized in Latin America as one of the most important poets of the 20th century. (Sources: Gale Literary Databases, Contemporary Authors; Poetry Foundation)
Subjects
American literature -- 20th century.
American poetry -- 20th century.
Latin American literature -- 20th century.
American literature.
American poetry.
Ecuadorian poetry.
Latin American literature.
Ecuadorian poetry -- 20th century.
INVENTORY
Collection Inventory for the Jorge Carrera Andrade Collection
