Rezwan Bajwa October 14, 2005
#11 Posted by mirmir on October 17, 2005 6:09:31 pm
Raw Dust...
No question - Márquez and Borges enjoy a well deserved reputation for excellence. Their outstanding contributions to the world`s literature have influenced, and will continue to influence, a good many younger authors. José Donoso, another author you might like (a Chilean by birth who spent 14 years of productive life in Spain) is considered by some to be another central figure in the ``boom`` generation of Latin American writers.
Rezwan...
You caught me there - you`re surely correct that few European countries want to be friends with Leftist Latin American governments. Probably I let my hope outrun whatever good sense I have. Still, though, not all of these governments are Left - certainly not Mexico - and governments do change their stripes. And all governments tend to overlook the internal politics of another when it suits their interest. Maybe my ``hope`` will even become reality, who knows.
mirmir
No question - Márquez and Borges enjoy a well deserved reputation for excellence. Their outstanding contributions to the world`s literature have influenced, and will continue to influence, a good many younger authors. José Donoso, another author you might like (a Chilean by birth who spent 14 years of productive life in Spain) is considered by some to be another central figure in the ``boom`` generation of Latin American writers.
Rezwan...
You caught me there - you`re surely correct that few European countries want to be friends with Leftist Latin American governments. Probably I let my hope outrun whatever good sense I have. Still, though, not all of these governments are Left - certainly not Mexico - and governments do change their stripes. And all governments tend to overlook the internal politics of another when it suits their interest. Maybe my ``hope`` will even become reality, who knows.
mirmir
#10 Posted by Raw_Dust on October 17, 2005 2:05:08 pm
i dont think Intizar Hussein is in the same league as Marquez and Borges... (given the few stories i have come across of IH).
mirmir:
great posts!.. thanks for the background on fuentes.... for me Marquez and Borges do wonders.... there is a Marquez`s story ``Eyes of a Blue Dog`` which is nothing like i have ever read anywhere...
(there are absolutely mindblowing portraits of Marquez and Borges in the current edition of poets-&-writers)
kulharee:
isnt it ironic that jihadis and progressive-islmaists, on their rebound, have (after being unceremoniously dumped by amreekis post afghan-jihad) fallen in love with Che Guevara and the company....
pakistani uncles now can be seen finding ``nuances`` in chomsky`s opinions... i mean :-)
mirmir:
great posts!.. thanks for the background on fuentes.... for me Marquez and Borges do wonders.... there is a Marquez`s story ``Eyes of a Blue Dog`` which is nothing like i have ever read anywhere...
(there are absolutely mindblowing portraits of Marquez and Borges in the current edition of poets-&-writers)
kulharee:
isnt it ironic that jihadis and progressive-islmaists, on their rebound, have (after being unceremoniously dumped by amreekis post afghan-jihad) fallen in love with Che Guevara and the company....
pakistani uncles now can be seen finding ``nuances`` in chomsky`s opinions... i mean :-)
#9 Posted by Kulharee on October 17, 2005 10:32:20 am
Guitar, Castro, Granado, Amado, Chinge de Madre?
The reason I said that you were talking thru your ass is because you mentioned that 40,000 Bolivian marched in Lapaz (out of 10 million) to demand for what??? Did it ever occur to you that it happens in democratic republics, and once there are marches against Castro in Habana, then you should idealize your heroes. Otherwise, it is just a plane hot air, and you don’t appear to have a clue. The reason these places are a mess is not because of corporations, but because of their own dictators. 60s and Che Guevara are dead. Honest to god. If you don’t believe me, ask your global studies teacher.
The reason I said that you were talking thru your ass is because you mentioned that 40,000 Bolivian marched in Lapaz (out of 10 million) to demand for what??? Did it ever occur to you that it happens in democratic republics, and once there are marches against Castro in Habana, then you should idealize your heroes. Otherwise, it is just a plane hot air, and you don’t appear to have a clue. The reason these places are a mess is not because of corporations, but because of their own dictators. 60s and Che Guevara are dead. Honest to god. If you don’t believe me, ask your global studies teacher.
#8 Posted by Rezwan on October 17, 2005 8:54:48 am
Re: # 6
well ...i guess pretentiousness will have to be forgiven.....while you remain confounded on how `shytfaces` like castro and chavez could get laid while you stil have to strum the guitar at night.
but this doesn,t mean that you give up ;)
cheers and take care!!!
well ...i guess pretentiousness will have to be forgiven.....while you remain confounded on how `shytfaces` like castro and chavez could get laid while you stil have to strum the guitar at night.
but this doesn,t mean that you give up ;)
cheers and take care!!!
#7 Posted by Rezwan on October 17, 2005 8:44:31 am
Re: # 3
Thank you for your reponse. it provides me with another insight which i will allow to affect me.
I think that latin america is a very interesting case to look at...in all its variations. unfortunately i look at it from afar and have not yet crossed the atlantic. maybe someday. however i do not agree with your idea of latin american unity forging some sort of a counterbalance with friends in europe. i do not see any friends in europe to the latin american left.
i live in berlin and interact a lot with eastern europeans and most of them are averse to anything red.....the EU is the next best thing....well anything liberal-western is a big turn on for them. not for all but for thos holding the reigns on powers.
thanks for the reading list though. will definitely browse through that sometime soon.
Thank you for your reponse. it provides me with another insight which i will allow to affect me.
I think that latin america is a very interesting case to look at...in all its variations. unfortunately i look at it from afar and have not yet crossed the atlantic. maybe someday. however i do not agree with your idea of latin american unity forging some sort of a counterbalance with friends in europe. i do not see any friends in europe to the latin american left.
i live in berlin and interact a lot with eastern europeans and most of them are averse to anything red.....the EU is the next best thing....well anything liberal-western is a big turn on for them. not for all but for thos holding the reigns on powers.
thanks for the reading list though. will definitely browse through that sometime soon.
#6 Posted by Kulharee on October 17, 2005 6:27:14 am
Do you guys have any shame for such pretentiousness? I mean do you even have a clue?
#5 Posted by mirmir on October 16, 2005 7:42:50 am
Re: # 4
Ana...
Carlos Fuentes targets an audience distinctly different from that of Octavio Paz or even Vargas Llosa. Fuentes aims at readers of “pop” literature, maybe the same sort of people who watch the TV series “Desperate Housewives.” Don’t expect from him profound intellectual insights, whether social or political. Above all he entertains. But to his credit he does openly criticize corruption and injustice all neatly wrapped in entertaining stories. Because of his popularity his social commentary has the potential to reach a lot more people than that of the deeper, more intellectual writers like Vargas Llosa or Paz. mirmir
Ana...
Carlos Fuentes targets an audience distinctly different from that of Octavio Paz or even Vargas Llosa. Fuentes aims at readers of “pop” literature, maybe the same sort of people who watch the TV series “Desperate Housewives.” Don’t expect from him profound intellectual insights, whether social or political. Above all he entertains. But to his credit he does openly criticize corruption and injustice all neatly wrapped in entertaining stories. Because of his popularity his social commentary has the potential to reach a lot more people than that of the deeper, more intellectual writers like Vargas Llosa or Paz. mirmir
#4 Posted by ana on October 15, 2005 4:36:09 pm
mirmir:
what about carlos fuentes? i`ve bought his very first novel, ``where the air is clear`` in translation, because it would take perhaps triple the amount of time to read it in spanish. but i`m curious as to what you think of his writings, both novelistic and political.
saludos, ana
what about carlos fuentes? i`ve bought his very first novel, ``where the air is clear`` in translation, because it would take perhaps triple the amount of time to read it in spanish. but i`m curious as to what you think of his writings, both novelistic and political.
saludos, ana
#3 Posted by mirmir on October 15, 2005 10:11:59 am
Rezwan...
The jury is still out on Chavez, at least among my friends here in Mexico. I have applauded many of his actions but I`ve remained skeptical. He may, in the end, prove to be one of those familiar ``populist`` demagogues who, having gotten hold of power, anoints himself ``el maximo`` - the people`s leader (dictator) who alone can save the country from ruin. I hope not. We`ll all know better after the next elections.
If Chavez truly wants to help the people of Venezuela, and other Latino countries as well, he will take the lead in forming a viable community of Latin American nations, allied with European friends, that would be a formidable counterbalance to the U.S.A. and its failed policies. Such an alliance would have the potential to not only benefit its member nations but the entire world. The hoped for counterbalance of a strong European alliance flounders - Latin America could fill the gap.
Castro has, in some ways, helped his people but he`s denied them basic freedoms and he has turned to tourism (priviliged islands of luxury and prostitution) in his quest for foreign currency. Lula looks good but Brasil`s problems are immense. Lula may become the scapegoat (if he can`t meet the people`s high expectations) and the victim of yet another South American military coup.
Mexico could be doing much more toward Latin American unity but its many close ties to the U.S.A., and its shared border, make it difficult for that nation to make any hard-nosed, sincere effort. even if it had the will (and under Fox it doesn`t). You might read some of Mexico`s brilliant Octavio Paz` political writings for further insight.
While no writer south of the border has had such clear vision in the political and social spheres Paz, of course, is better known for his poetry. He`s also written extraordinay essays on India and its rich culture. Juan Rulfo is another Mexican writer that no one interested in Latin American literature should ignore. He authored only two books, ``Pedro Páramo`` and ``El llano en llamas,`` but his influence on recent Latin American literature far exceeds that of Borges, and justifiably so.
mirmir
The jury is still out on Chavez, at least among my friends here in Mexico. I have applauded many of his actions but I`ve remained skeptical. He may, in the end, prove to be one of those familiar ``populist`` demagogues who, having gotten hold of power, anoints himself ``el maximo`` - the people`s leader (dictator) who alone can save the country from ruin. I hope not. We`ll all know better after the next elections.
If Chavez truly wants to help the people of Venezuela, and other Latino countries as well, he will take the lead in forming a viable community of Latin American nations, allied with European friends, that would be a formidable counterbalance to the U.S.A. and its failed policies. Such an alliance would have the potential to not only benefit its member nations but the entire world. The hoped for counterbalance of a strong European alliance flounders - Latin America could fill the gap.
Castro has, in some ways, helped his people but he`s denied them basic freedoms and he has turned to tourism (priviliged islands of luxury and prostitution) in his quest for foreign currency. Lula looks good but Brasil`s problems are immense. Lula may become the scapegoat (if he can`t meet the people`s high expectations) and the victim of yet another South American military coup.
Mexico could be doing much more toward Latin American unity but its many close ties to the U.S.A., and its shared border, make it difficult for that nation to make any hard-nosed, sincere effort. even if it had the will (and under Fox it doesn`t). You might read some of Mexico`s brilliant Octavio Paz` political writings for further insight.
While no writer south of the border has had such clear vision in the political and social spheres Paz, of course, is better known for his poetry. He`s also written extraordinay essays on India and its rich culture. Juan Rulfo is another Mexican writer that no one interested in Latin American literature should ignore. He authored only two books, ``Pedro Páramo`` and ``El llano en llamas,`` but his influence on recent Latin American literature far exceeds that of Borges, and justifiably so.
mirmir
#2 Posted by aashee on October 14, 2005 1:58:37 pm
Re: # 1 Kulharee, is that what you could think of after reading this article? Maybe those girls who slept with him were shytface too, just like him. BTW, I thought you preferred Thai chics.
#1 Posted by Kulharee on October 14, 2005 11:33:12 am
Is it true that Castro used to sleep around a lot in his youth and he fathered a number of kids outside of marriage? I am not saying there’s anything wrong with it, but my question is that with a shytface like him (and Hugo boy) a girl has to be an idiot to sleep with men like them. Latin girls are very voluptuous and hot, but they can also be pretty dumb. What do you think?
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