Stridentism (Spanish: Estridentismo) was an artistic and multidisciplinary avant-garde movement, founded in Puebla City by Manuel Maples Arce at the end of 1921 but formally developed in Xalapa where all the founders moved after the University of Veracruz granted its support for the movement. Stridentism shares some characteristics with Cubism, Dadaism, Futurism and Ultraism, but it developed a specific social dimension, taken from the Mexican Revolution, and a concern for action and its own present.
Stridentists were part of the political avant-garde, in contrast to the "elitist" modernism of Los Contemporáneos.
Chronology
1921: Mexico City, December 31, Manuel Maples Arce gives the first manifesto out.
1923: Maples Arce and List Arzubide give out the second manifesto, in the city of Puebla.
1923: Irradiador: short-lived journal (September, October, and November of 1923)
1924: First Stridentist Expo, at the "Café de nadie", in Mexico City.
1925: The group moves from Mexico City to Xalapa (recreated in their works as "Estridentópolis"). Third manifesto in the city of Zacatecas.
Schneider, Luis Mario. El estridentismo o una literatura de la estrategia, México: Conaculta, 1997. ISBN970-18-0376-0
Escalante, Evodio. Elevación y caída del estridentismo, México: Conaculta, 2002. ISBN970-18-8138-9
Hadatty Mora, Yanna. La ciudad paroxista. Prosa mexicana de vanguardia (1921–1932), México: UNAM, 2009. ISBN978-607-20-0360-6
Rashkin, Elissa J. The Stridentist Movement in Mexico: The Avant-garde and Cultural Change in the 1920s, Lanham, Maryland, USA: Lexington Books/Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2009. ISBN978-0-7391-3156-5
Flores, Tatiana. Mexico’s Revolutionary Avant-Gardes: From Estridentismo to ¡30-30!, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013. ISBN978-0-300-18448-8
Klych, Linda. The Noisemakers: Estridentismo, Vanguardism, and Social Action in Postrevolutionary Mexico, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2018. ISBN978-0-520-29640-4