Английская Википедия:Arturo Uslar Pietri

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Arturo Uslar Pietri (16 May 1906 in Caracas – 26 February 2001) was a Venezuelan intellectual, historian, writer, television producer, and politician.

Life

Born on 16 May 1906 in Caracas, Venezuela, his parents were general[1] Arturo Uslar Santamaría and Helena Pietri de Uslar.[2][3]

The last name Uslar is of German origin and can be traced back to Johann von Uslar, who fought for the rebel cause during Venezuela's independence wars.[3]

As a young boy and then teenager, Arturo lived in various cities in the comparatively urbanised central northern valleys of the country. He moved back to Caracas in 1924 to read political sciences at the Central University of Venezuela, where he graduated Doctor of Political Sciences in 1929. That same year he obtained a law degree.[3]

Uslar led a remarkably fruitful life, influential in Venezuelan politics, historical analysis and literature, and as an educator. His period of activity spanned the last years of Venezuelan Caudillismo, the transition to democracy and most of the democratic era of 1958 - 1999. He held posts such as Secretary for the Venezuelan Delegation at the League of Nations, delegate at the International Labour Organization, minister of education, minister of finance,[4] contributor to the Act of Constitution of the New Democratic Government (1958), ambassador to the United States, professor of Latin American literature at Columbia University, professor of political economics at the Central University of Venezuela, chief editor of a main newspaper, candidate for the Presidency and member of the Royal Spanish Academy.[5][6][1]

Uslar Pietri had a lifetime involvement in the Venezuelan media as a cultural figure. He wrote regionally influential essays and novels, of which The Red Lances,[7] an account of life during the Venezuelan War of Independence from various social perspectives is arguably the most famous. In his works he championed mestizaje, or miscegenation, as a valuable feature of Latin American culture.[6] His literary output was recognised in 1990 with a Prince of Asturias Award.[8] He was several times nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.[2]

Uslar Pietri died on 26 February 2001 in Caracas.[2] He had announced his retirement as an author in 1998 and last figured prominently in political debate in 1993.[3]

Awards

Works

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Novels

  • (1931) Las lanzas coloradas.
  • (1947) El camino de El Dorado.
  • (1962) Un retrato en la geografía.
  • (1964) Estación de máscaras.
  • (1976) Oficio de difuntos.
  • (1981) La isla de Robinson.
  • (1990) La visita en el tiempo.

Essays

  • (1945) Las visiones del camino.
  • (1945) Sumario de economía venezolana para alivio de estudiantes.
  • (1948) Letras y hombres de Venezuela.
  • (1949) De una a otra Venezuela.
  • (1951) Las nubes.
  • (1952) Apuntes para retratos.
  • (1953) Tierra venezolana.
  • (1954):Lecturas para jóvenes venezolanos
  • (1955) El petróleo en Venezuela.
  • (1955) Pizarrón.
  • (1955-56-58) Valores humanos.
  • (1955) Breve historia de la novela hispanoamericana.
  • (1959) Materiales para la construcción de Venezuela.
  • (1962) Del hacer y deshacer de Venezuela.
  • (1962) Sumario de la Civilización Occidental.
  • (1964) Valores humanos. Biografías y evocaciones.
  • (1964) La palabra compartida. Discursos en el Parlamento (1959–1963).


  • (1965) Hacia el humanismo democrático.
  • (1966) Petróleo de vida o muerte.
  • (1967) Oraciones para despertar.
  • (1968) Las vacas gordas y las vacas flacas.
  • (1969) En busca del nuevo mundo.
  • (1971) Vista desde un punto.
  • (1972) Bolivariana.
  • (1974) La otra América.
  • (1975) Viva voz.
  • (1979) Fantasmas de dos mundos.
  • (1981) Cuéntame a Venezuela.
  • (1981) Educar para Venezuela.
  • (1982) Fachas, fechas y fichas.
  • (1983) Bolívar hoy.
  • (1984) Venezuela en el petróleo.
  • (1986) Medio milenio de Venezuela.
  • (1986) Raíces venezolanas.
  • (1986) Bello el venezolano.
  • (1986) Godos, insurgentes y visionarios.
  • (1990) La creación del Nuevo Mundo.
  • (1992) Golpe y Estado en Venezuela.
  • (1994) Del cerro de plata al camino extraviado.

Short stories

  • (1928) Barrabás y otros relatos.
  • (1936) Red.
  • (1949) Treinta hombres y sus sombras.
  • (1954) Tiempo de contar. ( Anthology)
  • (1966) Pasos y Pasajeros.
  • (1967) La lluvia y otros cuentos.
  • (1975) Camino de cuento. ( Anthology)
  • (1980) Los Ganadores.

Poetry

  • (1972) Manoa: 1932–1972.
  • (1986) El hombre que voy siendo.

Theater

  • (1958) El día de Antero Alban. La Tebaida. El Dios invisible. La fuga de Miranda.
  • (1960) Chuo Gil y las tejedoras. Drama en un preludio y siete tiempos.

Travel

  • (1950) La ciudad de nadie.
  • (1954) El otoño en Europa.
  • (1955) Un turista en el cercano oriente.
  • (1960) La ciudad de nadie. El otoño en Europa. Un turista en el cercano oriente.
  • (1971) La vuelta al mundo en diez trancos.
  • (1975) El globo de colores.

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References

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External links

Шаблон:Prince of Asturias Award for Literature Шаблон:Rómulo Gallegos Prize winners Шаблон:National Prize for Literature (Venezuela) Шаблон:Authority control

  1. 1,0 1,1 Santos Himiob (1997) in Las Nubes (chronological references), 1st Edition. Monte Ávila Editores Latinoamericana.
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 Шаблон:Cite web
  3. 3,0 3,1 3,2 3,3 Шаблон:Cite web
  4. Шаблон:Cite book
  5. Шаблон:Cite web
  6. 6,0 6,1 Шаблон:Cite news
  7. USLAR PIETRI, Arturo. The Red Spears. NY: Knopf, 1963. First US edition. Translated by Harriet de Onís with an introduction by Federico de Onís
  8. Шаблон:Cite web