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criminally involved. They invented testimonies and attributed them to people who subsequently declared that they had never been to
Santiago de Chuco, the place of the crime. Finally, the material author was escorted to Trujillo to testify before the Supreme Court. However, on the long journey, the gendarmes, French police officers, that guarded him, shot and killed him under the pretext that he had attempted to escape. Moreover, the author has investigated the other actions of the judge ad hoc. In truth, he was a lawyer for the large reed business "Casagrande" and of the "Quiruvilca" mine where the employees operated without a schedule and were victims of horrific working conditions. All of this highlights the political character of the criminal proceedings. With Vallejo it had tried to mock his generation, university students that attempted to rise up against the injustice and embraced anarchism and socialism, utopias of the century.
283:. On the first of August, the house belonging to the Santa María Calderón family, who transported merchandise and alcohol by pack animals from the coast, was looted and set on fire. Vallejo was unjustly accused as both a participant and instigator of the act. He hid but was discovered, arrested, and thrown in a Trujillo jail where he would remain for 112 days (From November 6, 1920 until February 26, 1921). On December 24, 1920 he won second place (first place was declared void) from the city hall of Trujillo for the poem, "Fabla de gesta (Tribute to Marqués de Torre Tagle)". Vallejo competed by hiding his identity with a pseudonym in an attempt to give impartiality to the competition.
1181:
619:, published by the poet's wife after his death, is a leftist work of political, socially oriented poetry. Although a few of these poems appeared in magazines during Vallejo's lifetime, almost all of them were published posthumously. The poet never specified a title for this grouping, but while reading his body of work, his widow found that he had planned a book of "human poems", which is why his editors decided on this title. Of this last written work, it was said"... after a long silence, as if the presentiment of death might have urged him, he wrote in a few months the
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348:), whom he had seen when she was 17 and lived in his neighborhood. This was also the year of his first trip to Russia. They eventually became lovers, much to the dismay of her mother. Georgette traveled with him to Spain at the end of December 1930 and returned in January 1932. In 1930 the Spanish government awarded him a modest author's grant. Vallejo became increasingly politically active in the early 1930s, joining the
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716:(written between 1929 and 1931), which bring together diverse articles, some which were published in magazines and newspapers during the lifetime of the author. No Spanish editorial wanted to publish these books because of their Marxist and revolutionary character. They would later be published in 1973.
286:
In the work, "Vallejo en los infiernos", the author, a practicing lawyer, Eduardo González Viaña revealed key pieces of judicial documentation against the poet and showed deliberate fabrications by the judge and his enemies to imprison him. It indicted the victims but excluded prosecution to those
363:
A regular cultural contributor to weeklies in Lima, Vallejo also sent sporadic articles to newspapers and magazines in other parts of Latin
America, Spain, Italy, and France. His USSR trips also led to two books of reportage he was able to get published early in the 1930s. Vallejo also prepared
541:, published in 1922, anticipated much of the avant-garde movement that would develop in the 1920s and 1930s. Vallejo's book takes language to a radical extreme, inventing words, stretching syntax, using automatic writing and other techniques now known as "surrealist" (though he did this
400:, which he had suffered as a child), and on April 7 and 8 he became critically ill. He died a week later, on April 15, a holy, rainy Friday in Paris. It was not a Thursday, as he seemed to have predicted in his poem «"Black Stone on a White Stone"». His death was fictionalized in
395:
At the beginning of 1938, he worked as a language and literature professor in Paris, but in March he suffered from physical exhaustion. On March 24 he was hospitalized for an unknown disease (it was later understood that it was the reactivation of a kind of
234:, where he witnessed the exploitation of agrarian workers firsthand, an experience which would have an important impact on his politics and aesthetics. Vallejo received a BA in Spanish literature in 1915, the same year that he became acquainted with the
150:(March 16, 1892 – April 15, 1938) was a Peruvian poet, writer, playwright, and journalist. Although he published only two books of poetry during his lifetime, he is considered one of the great poetic innovators of the 20th century in any language.
290:
The judicial process was never closed. The poet left jail on behalf of a temporary release. Years later in Europe, he knew that he could never return to his home country. Jail and the "hells" revealed in this novel awaited him with an open door.
380:, Vallejo had a final burst of poetic activity in the late 1930s, producing two books of poetry (both published posthumously) whose titles and proper organization remain a matter of debate: they were published as
454:
describes this collection as "a staggering book, sensual, prophetic, affectionate, wild," and as "the greatest single collection of poems I have ever read." The title is likely suggestive of the
641:
which says, in summary, "Interesting, but terminally flawed". It deals with the conflict between a man and his mother-in-law. The text itself is lost, assumed to have been destroyed by
Vallejo.
276:, who had only recently died. Vallejo then suffered a number of calamities over the next few years: he refused to marry a woman with whom he had an affair; and he had lost his teaching post.
352:
in 1931. When he returned to Paris, he also went on to Russia to participate in the
International Congress of Writers' Solidarity towards the Soviet Regime (not to be confused with the
360:). Back in Paris, Vallejo married Georgette Philippart in 1934. His wife remained a controversial figure concerning the publication of Vallejo's works for many years after his death.
344:. In 1926 he met his first French lover, Henriette Maisse, with whom he lived until their breakup in October 1928. In 1927 he had formally met Georgette Marie Philippart Travers (see
746:", was rejected in Spain in 1930 for being too violent for children. But after it was published in Peru in the 1960s, it became mandatory reading in the elementary schools in Peru.
195:, premiered by the Peruvian baritone Rudi-Fernandez Cardenas with the composer himself on the piano, and have since entered the repertoire of vocal music for baritone and piano.
272:
Despite its stated publication year of 1918, the book was actually published a year later. It is also heavily influenced by the poetry and other writings of fellow
Peruvian
1319:
581:
as a living representation of a struggle between good and evil forces, where he advocates for the triumph of mankind. This is symbolised in the salvation of the
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which is still considered one of the most radically avant-garde poetry collections in the
Spanish language. After publishing the short story collections
1806:
1801:
1846:
614:
761:), first published in 1931, is a journalistic work describing Vallejo's impressions of the new socialist society that he saw being built in
1841:
1478:
842:; also includes original and translated correspondence between the translator and Vallejo's widow Georgette de Vallejo) Three Rooms Press.
727:(1931). A social realist novel depicting the oppression of native Peruvian miners and their communities by a foreign-owned tungsten mine.
20:
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in 1923, Vallejo emigrated to Europe under the threat of further incarceration and remained there until his death in Paris in 1938.
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683:(1934). Satire displaying Peruvian democracy as a bourgeois farce under pressure from international companies and diplomacy.
1811:
1326:
780:
1656:
El
Pensamiento Politico de César Vallejo y la Guerra Civil Española / George Lambie., 1993. Lima: Editorial Milla Batres
647:(1930, written in French; a Spanish translation by Vallejo himself is lost) deals with a labour struggle in a foundry.
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1761:
1302:
739:(1924) Literally 'Wild Language', is a short novel which follows the insanity of a character who lives in the Andes.
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223:. He was the youngest of eleven children. His grandfathers were both Spanish priests, and his grandmothers were both
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66:
353:
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24:
804:
1769:, including audio and video clips of Guillermo Verdecchia reading Clayton Eshleman's translation of Vallejo's
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1816:
1707:
Mi encuentro con
Vallejo; Prólogo de Luis Alva Castro / Antenor Orrego. Bogotá: Tercer Mundo Editores, 1989.
419:. On April 19, his remains were transferred to the Mansion of Culture, and later to the Montrouge cemetery.
340:
and a couple of years in the early 1930s spent in exile in Spain. In those years he shared the poverty with
1901:
1876:
247:
215:
César
Vallejo was born to Francisco de Paula Vallejo Benítez and María de los Santos Mendoza Gurrionero in
230:
Lack of funds forced him to withdraw from his studies for a time and work at a sugar plantation, the Roma
1831:
1826:
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28:
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Vallejo's
Interpretation of Spanish Culture and History in the Himno a los voluntarios de la República
446:(The Black Messengers) was completed in 1918, but not published until 1919. In the 1993 edited volume
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which shares content with another work he completed during this period, the socialist-realist novel
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Antenor Orrego y sus dos prólogos a Trilce / Manuel Ibáñez Rosazza. Trilce Editores: Trujillo, 1995
1147:
349:
1428:
273:
162:, a leading authority on world literature, called Vallejo "the greatest twentieth-century poet in
1019:
Poemas Humanos, Human Poems, by César Vallejo, a bilingual edition translated by Clayton Eshleman
582:
1689:
Algunos críticos de Vallejo y otros ensayos vallejianos / César Augusto Angeles Caballero., 2002
1485:
1686:
César Vallejo, arquitecto de la palabra, caminante de la gloria / Idelfonso Niño Albán., 2003
427:
1638:
https://web.archive.org/web/20090319121638/http://letrashispanas.unlv.edu/vol5iss2/perez.pdf
1634:
https://web.archive.org/web/20110929150115/http://letrashispanas.unlv.edu/vol5iss2/perez.htm
1796:
1791:
1267:
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224:
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665:(1930s) was the product of a long and difficult birth. Titles of earlier versions include
181:
8:
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1118:
883:
267:
261:; read, worked as a schoolteacher, and came into contact with the artistic and political
118:
836:
Malanga Chasing Vallejo: Selected Poems of César Vallejo with New Translations and Notes
1674:
Alcance filosófico en Cesar Vallejo y Antonio Machado / Antonio Belaunde Moreyra., 2005
1380:
800:
88:
924:(Translators: Richard Schaaf and Kathleen Ross) Latin American Literary Review Press.
825:(Translators: Clayton Eshleman and José Rubia Barcia), University of California Press
1708:
1453:
1372:
1298:
1197:
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1101:
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Vallejo wrote five plays, none of which was staged or published during his lifetime.
578:
423:
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several theatrical works never performed during his lifetime, among them his drama
177:
1726:
César Vallejo (1892–1938); Vida y obra, Revista Hispánica Moderna, New York, 1950.
1579:
The Catastrophe of Modernity: Tragedy and the Nation in Latin American Literature
1274:
192:
155:
1585:
The Poem on the Edge of the Word: the Limits of Language and the Uses of Silence
1061:(Translators: Kathleen Ross and Richard Schaaf) Ziesing Brothers Book Emporium.
545:
the Surrealist movement began). The book put Latin America at the center of the
328:. The engraving in Spanish quotes Vallejo "There is, brothers, very much to do."
203:
191:
Some of his poems have been set to music by the Indonesian composer and pianist
1122:
839:
689:(1937), a poetic drama set in the Inca period and influenced by Greek tragedy.
555:
243:
171:
1785:
1680:
Poéticas y utopías en la poesía de César Vallejo / Pedro José Granados., 2004
1376:
1209:
776:
598:
406:
341:
151:
1692:
César Vallejo en la crítica internacional / Wilfredo Kapsoli Escudero., 2001
1543:
Intellectuals, Ideology and Revolution: The Political Ideas of César Vallejo
995:(Introduction by James Higgins) The Commonwealth and International Library.
231:
1659:
César Vallejo, el poeta y el hombre / Ricardo Silva-Santisteban. Lima, 2010
803:, an Introduction by Efrain Kristal, and a Chronology by Stephen M. Hart.)
762:
638:
637:
is the subject of a critical letter from French actor and theatre director
590:
416:
35:
1677:
César Vallejo : estudios de poética / Jesús Humberto Florencia., 2005
1642:“César Vallejo’s Ars Poética of Nonsense: A Deleuzean Reading of Trilce.”
279:
His mother died in 1918. In May 1920, homesickness drove him to return to
1723:
César Vallejo, vida y obra / Luis Monguió. Editora Perú Nuevo: Lima, 1952
1173:
743:
550:
546:
373:
262:
235:
167:
1704:
Recopilación de textos sobre César Vallejo / Raúl Hernández Novás., 2000
701:(Madrid, 1931) and prepared another similar book for the presses titled
1662:
Recordando a Vallejo: La Bohemia de Trujillo / Luis Alva Castro, Luis.
1597:
The Poetry and Poetics of Cesar Vallejo: the Fourth Angle of the Circle
1384:
1352:
1279:
451:
783:. The book, originally written in 1931, was not published until 1965.
1114:
1736:
1698:
César Vallejo y la muerte de Dios / Rafael Gutiérrez Girardot., 2000
1683:
César Vallejo : muerte y resurrección / Max Silva Tuesta., 2003
1368:
1740:
1557:, George Lambie, 2004, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies (Higginschrift)
1100:, Vols. 38/39 and 40/41 (Translator: Prospero Saiz) Abraxas Press.
869:(Translators: Michael Smith, Valentino Gianuzzi). Shearsman Books.
856:(Translators: Michael Smith, Valentino Gianuzzi). Shearsman Books.
412:
1531:
Poetry and Politics: The Spanish Civil War Poetry of César Vallejo
397:
138:
39:
1204:
585:
that was being attacked by fascist allied forces led by General
458:, as the book touches on topics of religiosity, life and death.
376:. After becoming emotionally and intellectually involved in the
166:
language." He was a member of the intellectual community called
733:(1928) is a historic short story dealing with the Incan theme.
708:
Also, he organized two prose books about essay and reflection:
537:
304:
265:. While in Lima, he also produced his first poetry collection,
124:
712:(written, according to Georgette, between 1923 and 1929), and
302:. Nonetheless, 1922 he published his second volume of poetry,
298:
vindicated Vallejo's memory in a ceremony calling to the poet
1545:, George Lambie, 2000, Hispanic Research Journal, Vol.1, No.2
1353:"The Political Dimension of César Vallejo's "Poemas Humanos""
333:
220:
1762:
Information about Vallejo from the Academy of American Poets
1720:
César Vallejo, Sus mejores obras. Ediciones Perú: Lima, 1962
1671:
César Vallejo al pie del orbe / Iván Rodríguez Chávez., 2006
1242:""César Vallejo fue uno de los creadores del cuento-ensayo""
963:(Translators: Gordon Brotherstone and Edward Dorn) Penguin.
320:
650:
337:
325:
254:
1539:, George Lambie, 1999, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, LXXVI
911:(Translator: Barry Fogden) Allardyce, Barnett Publishers.
1646:, Rolando Pérez, 2008. www.dissidences/4PerezVallejo.html
1533:, George Lambie, 1992, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, LXIX
989:(Translator: Peter Boyle) Peruvian Consulate Publication.
976:(Translators: Robert Bly and James Wright) Beacon Press.
566:
1021:. Copyright 1968. Grove Press, 1969, xxv + 326 pp.
771:
is a second work of Vallejo's chronicles of his travels
527:
There are blows in life, so powerful . . . I don't know!
473:
There are blows in life, so powerful . . . I don't know!
1621:
Neruda and Vallejo in Contemporary United States Poetry
487:
They are few; but they are . . . They open dark furrows
332:
His European years found him living in dire poverty in
1551:, George Lambie, 2002, Romance Quarterly, Vol.49, No.2
1048:(Translator: Robert Mezey) Syracuse University Press.
786:
759:
Russia in 1931, reflections at the foot of the Kremlin
699:
Russia in 1931. Reflections at the foot of the Kremlin
577:(Spain, Take This Chalice from Me), Vallejo takes the
415:. His funeral eulogy was written by the French writer
1644:
Dissidences: Hispanic Journal of Theory and Criticism
1157:
188:
won the National Book Award for translation in 1979.
705:(finished in 1932 but was later published in 1965).
493:
Maybe they could be the horses of barbarous Attilas;
1757:
Human Potential: The Life and Work of César Vallejo
1695:
César Vallejo y el surrealismo / Juan Larrea., 2001
1573:
César Vallejo: The Dialectics of Poetry and Silence
1561:
Poetry in Pieces: César Vallejo and Lyric Modernity
898:(Translator: Rebecca Seiferle) Sheep Meadow Press.
1567:César Vallejo: A Critical Bibliography of Research
1400:Encyclopedia of Latin American history and culture
1603:Wounded Fiction: Modern Poetry and Deconstruction
515:And man . . . Poor . . . poor! He turns his eyes,
1783:
1628:Letras hispanas: Revista de literatura y cultura
850:(Trade Paperback) and 978-1-9411101-0-2 (ebook).
838:(Edited, Translated and with an Introduction by
524:is dammed up, like a pond of guilt, in his gaze.
501:They are the deep abysses of the soul's Christs,
158:". The late British poet, critic and biographer
1778:, the only extant interview with Vallejo, 1931.
823:The Complete Posthumous Poetry of César Vallejo
490:in the fiercest face and in the strongest side.
186:The Complete Posthumous Poetry of César Vallejo
46: and the second or maternal family name is
1426:
1292:
1035:(Translator: Richard Schaaf) Curbstone Press.
950:(Translator: Richard Schaaf) Curbstone Press.
521:he turns his crazed eyes, and everything lived
507:Those gory blows are the cracklings of a bread
482:were to dam up in the soul . . . I don't know!
476:Blows as from God's hatred; as if before them,
426:, had his remains moved and reinterred in the
154:called him "the greatest universal poet since
1317:
755:Rusia en 1931, reflexiones al pie del Kremlin
697:Vallejo published a chronicles book entitled
677:and several variations on this latter title.
438:
366:Colacho Hermanos o Los Presidentes de America
356:of 1934, which solidified the parameters for
170:formed in the Peruvian north coastal city of
1513:Madrid: Aguilar S.A. Ediciones, 1965, p1246
336:, with the exception of three trips to the
1397:
1283:. 3 May 2007. Retrieved on 17 August 2017.
675:El juego del amor, del odio y de la muerte
1668:Ensayos vallejianos / William Rowe., 2006
1511:Antología del la poesía hispanoamericano,
1098:Trilce (Selections from the 1922 Edition)
993:Cesar Vallejo: An Anthology of His Poetry
681:Colacho hermanos o Presidentes de América
504:of some revered faith Destiny blasphemes.
1807:National University of San Marcos alumni
1087:(Translator: Álvaro Cardona-Hine) Azul.
937:(Translator: Dave Smith) Mishima Books.
815:(shortlisted for the 2008 International
649:
604:
597:in his list of influential works of the
518:as when a slap on the shoulder calls us;
319:
202:
21:Club Deportivo Universidad César Vallejo
1350:
1008:(Translator: H. R. Hays) Sachem Press.
703:Russia before the second five-year plan
510:that burns-up on us at the oven's door.
1802:People from Santiago de Chuco Province
1784:
1427:LATIN POETS UK, ed. (April 16, 2012).
567:España, Aparta de Mí Este Cáliz (1939)
1701:César Vallejo / Víctor de Lama., 2000
1320:"(spanish) Reivindicación de Vallejo"
1847:Peruvian speculative fiction writers
1626:“Vallejo on Language and Politics,”
793:The Complete Poetry of César Vallejo
496:or the black heralds Death sends us.
1842:Peruvian dramatists and playwrights
787:Selected works available in English
479:the backlash of everything suffered
219:, a remote village in the Peruvian
13:
1519:
1402:. Detroit: Gale. pp. 274–275.
974:Neruda and Vallejo: Selected Poems
867:The Complete Later Poems 1923–1938
663:Entre las dos orillas corre el río
448:Neruda and Vallejo: Selected Poems
14:
1913:
1730:
731:Towards the kingdom of the Sciris
654:Monument to César Vallejo in the
583:Second Spanish Republic (1931–39)
372:He even wrote a children's book,
259:National University of San Marcos
209:National University of San Marcos
1892:Burials at Montparnasse Cemetery
1744:
1293:González Viaña, Eduardo (2008).
1266:|González Echevarría, Roberto ,
1215:
1203:
1191:
1179:
1167:
1085:Spain, Let This Cup Pass from Me
1074:(Translator: Mary Sarko ) Azul.
769:Rusia ante el II Plan Quinquenal
531:
386:España, aparta de mí este cáliz.
354:First Congress of Soviet Writers
238:of Trujillo, in particular with
137:
65:
1872:Prisoners and detainees of Peru
1862:People of the Spanish Civil War
1503:
1471:
1006:Selected Poems of Cesar Vallejo
882:(Translator: Rebecca Seiferle)
595:España, Aparta de Mí Este Cáliz
574:España, aparta de mí este cáliz
456:four horsemen of the apocalypse
23:. For the volleyball club, see
1767:Griffin Poetry Prize biography
1549:Vallejo and the End of History
1446:
1420:
1406:
1391:
1344:
1311:
1286:
1260:
1248:(in Spanish). January 16, 2005
1234:
805:University of California Press
749:
1:
1228:
422:On April 3, 1970, his widow,
324:Monument to César Vallejo in
207:Monument to César Vallejo at
148:César Abraham Vallejo Mendoza
80:César Abraham Vallejo Mendoza
1752:An excerpt of Vallejo´s work
1623:, Mark Jonathan Cramer, 1976
1429:"Cesar Vallejo Tribute 2012"
710:Against Professional Secrecy
563:borders on inaccessibility.
248:Victor Raul Haya de la Torre
198:
38:, the first or paternal
25:CV Universidad César Vallejo
7:
1812:20th-century Peruvian poets
1743:(public domain audiobooks)
1611:, Christopher Buckley, 2006
1136:
1072:Spain Take This Cup from Me
579:Spanish Civil War (1936–39)
19:For the football club, see
10:
1918:
1857:French–Spanish translators
1617:, George Gordon Wing, 1972
1357:The Modern Language Review
1273:September 6, 2017, at the
987:I'm going to speak of hope
795:(Edited and Translated by
465:Poem: "The Black Heralds"
439:Los Heraldos Negros (1919)
33:
27:. For the university, see
18:
1318:Judiciary of Peru (ed.).
1297:. Barcelona: Alfaqueque.
1153:Latin American Literature
719:
253:In 1911 Vallejo moved to
136:
131:
113:
105:
95:
76:
64:
57:
1563:, Michelle Clayton, 2011
1398:Kinsbruner, Jay (2008).
1295:Vallejo en los infiernos
1268:"Revolutionary Devotion"
1148:List of Peruvian writers
692:
626:
433:
390:
350:Peruvian Communist Party
109:Poet, writer, journalist
99:April 15, 1938 (aged 46)
29:César Vallejo University
1615:Trilce I: a Second Look
1433:WWW.LATINOSINLONDON.COM
1351:Britton, R. K. (1975).
1897:North Group (Trujillo)
1776:Interview with Vallejo
1737:Works by César Vallejo
1630:, Rolando Pérez, 2008.
1605:, Joseph Adamson, 1988
1587:, D.C. Niebylski, 1993
1569:, Stephen M Hart, 2002
742:The children's book, "
659:
329:
257:, where he studied at
212:
1555:Vallejo and Democracy
948:Autopsy on Surrealism
799:. With a Foreword by
653:
605:Poemas Humanos (1939)
428:Montparnasse cemetery
323:
311:Escalas melografiadas
274:Manuel González Prada
206:
1837:Peruvian translators
1817:Peruvian journalists
1599:, Adam Sharman, 1997
1593:, Xavier Abril, 1958
1581:, Patrick Dove, 2004
1509:Julio Caillet Bois,
817:Griffin Poetry Prize
656:Jesus Maria District
225:indigenous Peruvians
160:Martin Seymour-Smith
1902:Peruvian male poets
1877:Peruvian communists
1575:, Jean Franco, 1976
1479:"The Black Heralds"
1143:Peruvian literature
1033:The Mayakovsky Case
884:Copper Canyon Press
444:Los Heraldos Negros
268:Los heraldos negros
211:, where he studied.
119:Los heraldos negros
1832:Peruvian essayists
1827:Peruvian satirists
1822:Peruvian educators
1664:www.Tribuna-us.com
801:Mario Vargas Llosa
714:Art and Revolution
671:Moscú contra Moscú
660:
330:
213:
184:'s translation of
1882:Communist writers
1713:978-95-8601-224-9
1609:Homage to Vallejo
1131:978-0-9770723-2-3
1106:978-0-932868-07-7
1093:978-1-885214-42-3
1080:978-1-885214-03-4
1067:978-0-917488-05-4
1054:978-0-8156-0226-2
1041:978-0-915306-31-2
1027:978-84-376-0731-3
1014:978-0-937584-01-9
1001:978-0-08-015761-0
982:978-0-8070-6489-4
969:978-0-14-042189-7
956:978-0-915306-32-9
943:978-0-670-73060-5
930:978-0-935480-43-6
922:The Black Heralds
917:978-0-907954-23-1
909:The Black Heralds
904:978-1-878818-12-6
891:978-1-55659-199-0
880:The Black Heralds
875:978-0-907562-73-3
862:978-0-907562-72-6
848:978-0-9895125-7-2
831:978-0-520-04099-1
813:978-0-520-24552-5
687:La piedra cansada
424:Georgette Vallejo
378:Spanish Civil War
358:Socialist Realism
346:Georgette Vallejo
296:Judiciary of Peru
281:Santiago de Chuco
217:Santiago de Chuco
182:José Rubia Barcia
145:
144:
85:Santiago de Chuco
1909:
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1414:"Vallejo, Cesar"
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773:in Soviet Russia
667:Varona Polianova
300:unfairly accused
178:Clayton Eshleman
141:
69:
55:
54:
1917:
1916:
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1911:
1910:
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1887:Communist poets
1867:Peruvian exiles
1852:Mestizo writers
1782:
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1520:Further reading
1517:
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1454:"Cesar Vallejo"
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71:Vallejo in 1929
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775:, focusing on
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658:of Lima, Peru.
628:
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621:Poemas humanos
610:Poemas Humanos
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556:Finnegans Wake
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599:Western Canon
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407:Monsieur Pain
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370:El Tungsteno.
367:
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342:Pablo Picasso
339:
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152:Thomas Merton
149:
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114:Notable works
112:
108:
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101:Paris, France
98:
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90:
86:
79:
75:
68:
63:
59:César Vallejo
56:
53:
49:
45:
41:
37:
30:
26:
22:
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1495:December 21,
1493:. Retrieved
1486:the original
1473:
1461:. Retrieved
1457:
1448:
1436:. Retrieved
1432:
1422:
1408:
1399:
1393:
1360:
1356:
1346:
1336:November 17,
1334:. Retrieved
1327:the original
1313:
1294:
1288:
1278:
1262:
1250:. Retrieved
1246:La República
1245:
1236:
1119:James Wagner
1117:translator:
1110:
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1084:
1071:
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1005:
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792:
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725:El tungsteno
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666:
662:
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639:Louis Jouvet
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591:Harold Bloom
572:
570:
560:
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417:Louis Aragon
405:
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294:In 2007 the
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147:
146:
123:
117:
52:
47:
43:
36:Spanish name
1797:1938 deaths
1792:1892 births
1438:November 6,
750:Non-fiction
744:Paco Yunque
615:Human Poems
551:James Joyce
547:Avant-garde
374:Paco Yunque
263:avant-garde
168:North Group
89:La Libertad
1786:Categories
1280:The Nation
1229:References
1198:Literature
1115:Homophonic
779:'s second
589:. In 1994
452:Robert Bly
106:Occupation
1377:0026-7937
1252:April 23,
1222:Biography
593:included
404:'s novel
199:Biography
132:Signature
1741:LibriVox
1463:March 1,
1271:Archived
1137:See also
1046:Tungsten
645:Lock-Out
413:embalmed
232:Hacienda
172:Trujillo
34:In this
1651:Spanish
1591:Vallejo
1525:English
1385:3725521
1160:Portals
549:. Like
411:He was
398:malaria
236:bohemia
48:Mendoza
44:Vallejo
40:surname
1771:Guitar
1711:
1383:
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1301:
1210:Poetry
1129:
1111:Trilce
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896:Trilce
889:
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860:
854:Trilce
846:
829:
811:
720:Novels
635:Mampar
587:Franco
561:Trilce
543:before
538:Trilce
305:Trilce
125:Trilce
91:, Peru
1489:(PDF)
1482:(PDF)
1381:JSTOR
1330:(PDF)
1323:(PDF)
693:Essay
627:Plays
434:Works
391:Death
334:Paris
221:Andes
156:Dante
1709:ISBN
1497:2012
1465:2017
1440:2012
1373:ISSN
1338:2012
1299:ISBN
1254:2009
1174:Peru
1127:ISBN
1102:ISBN
1089:ISBN
1076:ISBN
1063:ISBN
1050:ISBN
1037:ISBN
1023:ISBN
1010:ISBN
997:ISBN
978:ISBN
965:ISBN
952:ISBN
939:ISBN
926:ISBN
913:ISBN
900:ISBN
887:ISBN
871:ISBN
858:ISBN
844:ISBN
827:ISBN
809:ISBN
384:and
338:USSR
326:Lima
313:and
255:Lima
246:and
240:APRA
180:and
96:Died
77:Born
1739:at
1365:doi
1121:).
623:."
571:In
553:'s
164:any
42:is
1788::
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31:.
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