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'''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 [[surrealism|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]]'' (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.
{{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 wrote several novels:
* ''[[El Señor Presidente (Asturias novel)|El Señor Presidente]]'' (1946)
* ''Hombres de maíz'' (1949)
* ''Week-end in Guatemala'' (1956)
* ''Los ojos de los enterrados'' (1960).
 
One Asturias scholar, René Prieto, contended in 1993 that some of Asturias' best work is among the least well-known<ref>René Prieto. 1993. Miguel Angel Asturias's archeology of return. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press</ref>/
 
== Notes ==
<references>
 
</references>


==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 08:26, 22 April 2024

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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 wrote several novels:

  • El Señor Presidente (1946)
  • Hombres de maíz (1949)
  • Week-end in Guatemala (1956)
  • Los ojos de los enterrados (1960).

One Asturias scholar, René Prieto, contended in 1993 that some of Asturias' best work is among the least well-known[1]/

Notes

  1. René Prieto. 1993. Miguel Angel Asturias's archeology of return. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press

References