Paz, Octavio - Enrico Mario Santí (essay date spring 1995)
Enrico Mario Santí (essay date spring 1995)
SOURCE: Santí, Enrico Mario. “Octavio Paz: Otherness and the Search for the Present.” Georgia Review 49, no. 1 (spring 1995): 265-71.
[In the following essay, Santí offers an overview of Paz's career and works.]
In choosing Octavio Paz to receive the Nobel Prize in 1990, the Swedish Academy pointed particularly to Paz's “passionate writing of wide horizons … characterized by sensual intelligence and humanistic integrity.” By so doing, it acknowledged more than sixty years of a poetic and intellectual career which has made Paz one of the most important writers now living. For students of Latin American literature the news of the award came as no surprise; many had believed for years that Paz deserved it. It could even be said that with this award the Academy was vindicating its earlier indifference to other Latin American writers who were equally deserving (like Borges, Lezama Lima,...
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Criticism
- Jason Wilson (essay date 1986)
- Helen Vendler (essay date 4 April 1988)
- J. D. McClatchy (essay date April 1989)
- Manuel Durán (essay date winter 1991)
- John Zubizarreta (essay date January 1991)
- Richard Poirier (essay date spring 1991)
- Julia A. Kushigian (essay date 1991)
- Timothy Clark (essay date 1992)
- Haider Ali Khan (essay date summer 1992)
- Ollie O. Oviedo (essay date 1992)
- Enrico Mario Santí (essay date spring 1995)
- John Zubizarreta (essay date summer 1995)
- Dean Rader (essay date fall 1997)
- Barbara Mujica (essay date August 1998)
- Manuel Durán (essay date winter 1999)
- Mario J. Valdés (essay date 1999)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date March-April 2000)
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