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Octavio
Paz was born in 1914 in Mexico City. On his father's side,
his grandfather was a prominent liberal intellectual and one of the first
authors to write a novel with an expressly Indian theme. Thanks to his
grandfather's extensive library, Paz came into early contact with literature.
Like his grandfather, his father was also an active political journalist
who, together with other progressive intellectuals, joined the agrarian
uprisings led by Emiliano Zapata.
Paz is a poet and an essayist. His poetic corpus is nourished by the belief
that poetry constitutes "the secret religion of the modern age."
Eliot Weinberger has written that, for Paz, "the revolution of the
word is the revolution of the world, and that both cannot exist without
the revolution of the body: life as art, a return to the mythic lost unity
of thought and body, man and nature, I and the other." His is a poetry
written within the perpetual motion and transparencies of the eternal
present tense. Paz's poetry has been collected in Poemas 1935-1975 (1981)
and Collected Poems, 1957-1987 (1987). A remarkable prose stylist, Paz
has written a prolific body of essays, including several book-length studies,
in poetics, literary and art criticism, as well as on Mexican history,
politics and culture.
(taken
from nobelprize.org) |