Miguel Ángel Asturias: Difference between revisions
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{{Image|Miguel Angel Asturias.jpg|right|300px|Miguel Ángel Asturias in 1968.}} | |||
'''Miguel Ángel Asturias''' (1899-1974) was the first Latin American writer to be awarded the [[Nobel Prize]] in literature. A native of [[Guatemala]], Asturias is known for his use of surrealist-inspired magical realism and for his incorporation of [[folklore]] and indigenous mythology into his works. Asturias is best known for composing ''[[El Señor Presidente (Asturias novel)]]'' (1946), ''Hombres de maíz'' (1949), ''Week-end in Guatemala'' (1956), and ''Los ojos de los enterrados'' (1960) but at least one scholar<ref>René Prieto. 1993. Miguel Angel Asturias's archeology of return. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.</ref> contends that some of his best work is among the least well-known. | '''Miguel Ángel Asturias''' (1899-1974) was the first Latin American writer to be awarded the [[Nobel Prize]] in literature. A native of [[Guatemala]], Asturias is known for his use of surrealist-inspired magical realism and for his incorporation of [[folklore]] and indigenous mythology into his works. Asturias is best known for composing ''[[El Señor Presidente (Asturias novel)]]'' (1946), ''Hombres de maíz'' (1949), ''Week-end in Guatemala'' (1956), and ''Los ojos de los enterrados'' (1960) but at least one scholar<ref>René Prieto. 1993. Miguel Angel Asturias's archeology of return. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.</ref> contends that some of his best work is among the least well-known. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Revision as of 07:22, 22 April 2024
Miguel Ángel Asturias (1899-1974) was the first Latin American writer to be awarded the Nobel Prize in literature. A native of Guatemala, Asturias is known for his use of surrealist-inspired magical realism and for his incorporation of folklore and indigenous mythology into his works. Asturias is best known for composing El Señor Presidente (Asturias novel) (1946), Hombres de maíz (1949), Week-end in Guatemala (1956), and Los ojos de los enterrados (1960) but at least one scholar[1] contends that some of his best work is among the least well-known.
References
- ↑ René Prieto. 1993. Miguel Angel Asturias's archeology of return. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.