Jump to content

Humberto Rivas Mijares

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 05:44, 31 January 2016 (Cat-a-lot: Moving from Category:Venezuelan writers to Category:Venezuelan male writers). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Humberto Rivas Mijares (1918–1981) was a Venezuelan writer, journalist and diplomat. He was born in Valencia, Venezuela on December 21, 1918 and died in Caracas on November 23, 1981.

Life and career

He spent his teenage years on a coffee plantation in Nirgua with a paternal uncle after the death of his father. He lived among various agricultural communities and activities, many experiences that would mark his first literary works such as Gleba, Ocho relatos (Gleba, eight stories) and Hacia el Sur (Towards the south), published between 1942 and 1944.[1][2]

In Hacia el Sur (Towards the south) there is an interesting description of agrarian Venezuela which changed its course towards the city.[1]

In 1949 he published El Murado (The walled in) his masterpiece. This is one of the first stories of modern Venezuela. The agrarian country lags behind and makes room for the inner man. This work is part of most anthologies of Venezuelan and Latin American Storytellers.[1]

One of the works that best describes the author as a man of ideals is certainly Cuando cayó el Miliciano (When the Militiaman fell). In 1961, he translated Poemas Piaroas (Piaroas Poems), interesting Venezuelan aboriginal poems into Italian (Rome, Italy). His last literary work was the story La Trumpeta (The Trumpet) which remains an interesting sketch where a deceased presided over his own funeral himself playing the trumpet: There they go: the priest, the grocer, the druggist, the carpenter, the trumpet, the dead. The Cross, the mouth that murmurs. The rosary held high between the fingers. the sound of the trumpet. the air that turns golden. The beloved death.[1]

References

Template:Persondata