![]() ![]() His father served as assistant to Emiliano Zapata, the leader of a popular revolution in 1911. Paz was born in 1914 near Mexico City, into a prominent family with ties to Mexico’s political, cultural, and military elite. ![]() According to his obituary in Americas, “Paz’s literary career helped to define modern poetry and the Mexican personality.” His passing was mourned as the end of an era for Mexico. “What began as a slow, almost microscopic examination of self and of a single cultural tradition widens unexpectedly,” Duran continued, “becoming universal without sacrificing its unique characteristic.” Paz won the Nobel Prize in 1990, and died eight years later at the age of 84. Although Mexico figures prominently in Paz’s work-one of his best-known books, The Labyrinth of Solitude, for example, is a comprehensive portrait of Mexican society- Los Angeles Timescontributor Jascha Kessler called Paz “truly international.” World Literature Today’s Manuel Duran felt that Paz’s “exploration of Mexican existential values permit him to open a door to an understanding of other countries and other cultures” and thus appeal to readers of diverse backgrounds. Mexican author Octavio Paz enjoyed a worldwide reputation as a master poet and essayist. ![]()
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