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         Paz Octavio:     more books (100)
  1. Figures & Figurations (New Directions Paperbook) by Marie José Paz, Octavio Paz, 2008-08-17
  2. El Arco y La lira by Octavio Paz, 1973
  3. Tiempo nublado by Octavio Paz, 1995-09
  4. The Bow and the Lyre (Texas Pan American Series) by Octavio Paz, 2009-12-01
  5. Sor Juana: Or, the Traps of Faith by Octavio Paz, 1990-01-02
  6. Itinerary: An Intellectual Journey by Octavio Paz, 2001-11-12
  7. Octavio Paz: Surrealism, Existentialism, Nobel Prize in Literature, The Labyrinth of Solitude, Vuelta
  8. Libertad Bajo Palabra (Letras Mexicanas) (Spanish Edition) by Octavio Paz, 2006-12-31
  9. The Other Voice: Essays on modern poetry by Octavio Paz, 1992
  10. The Monkey Grammarian by Octavio Paz, 1991-01-18
  11. Vuelta: (1969-1975) by Octavio Paz, 1976-09-01
  12. Octavio Paz (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
  13. A treinta anos de plural (1971-1976). Revista fundada y dirigida por Octavio Paz (Tezontle) (Spanish Edition) by Marie-Jose, Adolfo Castanon Paz y Danubio Torres Fierro, 1996-10-12
  14. Claridad Errante (Fondo 2000 Series) (Spanish Edition) by Octavio Paz, 1999-08-01

21. Nuestros Premios Nobel Octavio Paz
Translate this page Ciencia y la Cultura. Iberoamérica Conoce Publicación TrimestralNúmero 6 - Junio de 1998. octavio paz nobel de Literatura 1991.
http://www.oei.org.co/ibcon6/nobel01.htm

22. Paz, Octavio
2, In Search of the Present. octavio paz's nobel Prize acceptance speech(Literature 1990). 4, octavio paz nobel Prize in Literature 1990.
http://www.ad.com/Arts/Literature/World_Literature/Latin_American/Authors/__Paz,
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In Memory of Octavio Paz (1914-1998) From The New York Review of Books, May 28, 1998. By Enrique Krauze.
Category: Arts > Literature > Authors > P > Paz, Octavio
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/WWWarchdisplay.cgi?19980528024F
In Search of the Present
Octavio Paz's Nobel Prize acceptance speech (Literature 1990).
Category: Arts > Literature > Authors > P > Paz, Octavio
http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1990/paz-lecture.html
Octavio Paz and the Future of Poetry
Article by Nathaniel Tarn in Jacket # 9.
Category: Arts > Literature > Authors > P > Paz, Octavio
http://www.jacket.zip.com.au/jacket09/tarn-on-paz.html Octavio Paz: Nobel Prize in Literature 1990 Press release, biography, Nobel lecture, Nobel diploma. Category: Arts > Literature > Authors > P > Paz, Octavio http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1990/ AD.COM Web Directory is based on ODP - Open Directory Project data. No proprietary software was used in the development of this web site. Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. Submit a Site Open Directory Project Become an Editor

23. Résultats De La Recherche Par Auteur
Translate this page Envoyez cette citation à un(e) ami(e) Ecrivain mexicain (nobel delittérature 1990) octavio paz Insérer dans mon Citabook.
http://www.citationsdumonde.com/req_auteur.asp?Auteur=Octavio Paz

24. An Article On Nobel Laureate And Indophile, Octavio Paz
By Makarand Paranjape octavio paz is dead. Do poets really die? No. Just asthey don't live conventionally, poets don't die conventionally either.
http://www.lifepositive.com/mind/arts/new-age-fiction/Paz.asp
Register to the site Shopping Bazaar Find Practitioner Events Calendar ... Magazine PASSIONATE PILGRIM BACK TO HOME
By Makarand Paranjape
Octavio Paz is dead. Do poets really die? No. Just as they don't live conventionally, poets don't die conventionally either. I realize this with renewed force when I read Paz again:
An enormous mass of liquid mercury, barely undulating; vague hills in the distance; flocks of birds; a pale sky and scraps of pink clouds... Little by little the white-and-blue architecture of the city sprouted up, a stream of smoke from a chimney, the ochre and green stains of a distant garden. An arch of stone appeared, planed on a dock and crowned with four little towers in the shape of pine trees. Someone leaning on the railing beside me exclaimed, 'The Gateway of India!'
Paz , a minor functionary in the Mexican Embassy in Paris, is transferred to India in November 1951. Mexico is planning to open a mission in the newly independent nation. Paz is dismayed at the prospect of our strange country: "rituals, temples, cities whose names evoked strange tales, motley and multicolored crowds, women with feline grace and dark and shining eyes, saints, beggars...." Armed with a copy of the Gita, young

25. Colegio Don Bosco Altamira
Translate this page Ésas son algunas de las interrogantes de quienes admiran a ese río que vivey avanza la Literatura Latinoamericana. Premio nobel 1990. paz, octavio.
http://www.aldeae.net/donbosco/aldea/biograf2.asp?which1=126

26. PolitInfo.com: Web Directory: Arts Paz, Octavio
In Search of the Present octavio paz's nobel Prize acceptance speech (Literature1990). url www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1990/pazlecture .
http://web.politinfo.com/index.cgi?base=/Arts/Literature/Authors/P/Paz,_Octavio/

27. Octavio Paz - The Academy Of American Poets
the Mire. octavio paz exhibits elsewhere on the web octavio paz,1990 nobel Laureate Page from the nobel Prize Internet Archive.
http://www.onlinepoetryclassroom.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=662

28. HISPANIC NOBEL PRICES
Translate this page HISPANIC nobel PRICES. ALEIXANDRE, Vicente, Spain, Literature, 1977. paz, octavio,México, Literature, 1990 PEREZ ESQUIVEL, Adolfo, Argentina, Peace, 1980.
http://coloquio.com/famosos/nobelalp.html
HISPANIC NOBEL PRICES
ALEIXANDRE, Vicente , Spain, Literature, 1977.
ARIAS, Oscar
, Costa Rica, Peace, 1987
ASTURIAS, Miguel Angel
, Guatemala, Literature, 1967.
BENACERRAF, Baruj
, Venezuela, Medicine and Physiology, 1980
BENAVENTE y Martínez, Jacinto
, Spain, Literature, 1922
CELA, Camilo José
, Spain, Literature, 1989
ECHEGARAY, José
, Spain, Literature, 1901.
GARCIA MARQUEZ, Gabriel
, Colombia, Literature, 1982.
GARCIA ROBLES, Alfonso
, México, Peace, 1982.
HOUSSAY, Bernardo
, Argentina, Medicine and Physiology, 1917.
JIMENEZ, Juan Ramón
, Spain, Literature, 1956 LELOIR, Luis Federico , Argentina, Chemistry, 1970. MENCHU, Rigoberta, Guatemala, Paz, 1991 MILSTEIN, César , Argentina, Medicine and Physiology, 1980. MISTRAL, Gabriela (Godoy y Alcayaga, Lucila), Chile, Literature, 1945. MOLINA, Mario , México, Chemistry, 1995. NERUDA, Pablo (Ricardo E. Neftalí Reyes y Basoalto), Chile, Literature, 1971. OCHOA, Severo , Spain, Medicine and Physiology, 1959. PAZ, Octavio , México, Literature, 1990 PEREZ ESQUIVEL, Adolfo , Argentina, Peace, 1980. RAMON Y CAJAL, Santiago

29. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
Friday, October 12, 1990 Page 1 Section NATIONAL/FOREIGN octavio paz, the Mexican patriarchof Latin American culture, has won this year's nobel Prize for
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1990/1990l.html

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MEXICO'S PAZ WINS LITERATURE NOBEL
Author: By Mark Feeney, Globe Staff Date: Friday, October 12, 1990
Page:
Section:
NATIONAL/FOREIGN Octavio Paz, the Mexican poet and man of letters in the grand tradition, as well as an at times controversial patriarch of Latin American culture, has won this year's Nobel Prize for literature. The announcement was made yesterday in Stockholm. The Swedish Academy, in selecting Paz, cited the 76-year-old author "for impassioned writing with wide horizons, characterized by sensuous intelligence and humanistic integrity." As is not always the case with the literary Nobel, Paz's selection met with widespread approval. The Peruvian novelist Mario Vargas Llosa said in Washington, "Octavio is one of the greatest poets that the Spanish-language world has produced and, at the same time, a great humanist." Gregory Rabassa, a leading US translator of Latin American literature said in a phone interview: "I certainly think he deserves it. He's the best poet writing in Spanish today. . . He represents a certain generation, that is, the last of the third generation of Modernists." While primarily a poet, Paz won the most fame for his meditation on Mexican culture "The Labyrinth of Solitude," published in 1959. His greatest poem is generally considered to be "Sun Stone," published in 1957, which was inspired by a monumental stone Aztec calendar. Critics have praised the poetry as lyrical and erotic and said it expresses Paz's sense of the deep loneliness of man, which can be transcended only through attempts at communion, sexual love, compassion and faith.

30. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
Date Friday, October 12, 1990 Page 29 Section LIVING octavio paz, who yesterdaywon the nobel Prize for literature, has been described as a man in love
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1990/1990n.html

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OCTAVIO PAZ INVENTS HIS OWN REALITY
Author: By Robert Taylor, Special to the Globe Date: Friday, October 12, 1990
Page:
Section:
LIVING Octavio Paz, who yesterday won the Nobel Prize for literature, has been described as "a man in love with silence who can't stop talking" a probing intellect whose 40 volumes of prose and poetry examine the web of time and history and human solitude. Seeking the identity of Mexico is, in his works, a way to decipher the world. The most cosmopolitan of Latin America's poets and critics, his work synthesizes diverse influences: from the French Symbolists, Rimbaud's colored vowels; from the Surrealist movements of the '20s and '30s, the notion of Surrealism as an aspect of spiritual liberty; from English and German Romantic poets, a belief in the transcendental power of the word; from Mexico itself, the baroque rhythms of Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz; from India and his studies of Tantrism and Buddhism, a vision of the regenerative energies of physical and metaphysical love. And yet, although he abstains from local color or regionalism, Paz remains fundamentally the most Mexican of writers. "The Labyrinth of Solitude" (1959; English translation, 1961) is an acute analysis of Mexican society that traces what Paz calls the "invisible history" of Mexico that of the pre-Columbian cultures which continue to influence the modern state. "To become aware of our history," he writes, "is to become aware of our singularity." In the more recent "One Earth, Four or Five Worlds," he enlarges upon this: " 'Third World' is an expression that there is good reason to abolish. The label is not only inexact: it is a semantic trap. The Third World is many worlds, all of them different."

31. Octavio Paz - Nobel
El Premio nobel de octavio paz Unos articulos de The Boston Globe (en inglés)
http://www.creighton.edu/langlab/classes/spn31299/clancy/nobel.html
El Premio Nobel
de Octavio Paz
Unos articulos de The Boston Globe Mexico's Paz Wins Literature Nobel
Octavio Paz Invents His Own Reality
In Search of the Present The Nobel Prize Internet Archive ( homepage 1990 Nobel Laureate in Literature Octavio Paz La Universidad de Creighton

32. In Search Of The Present -- Nobel Lecture, 1990 -- Octavio Paz Anthony Stanton
In Search of the Present. nobel Lecture, 1990. Price $10.00. Coop Discount10%. In Stock Will Ship in 1 to 2 business days. by octavio paz,.
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0156445565
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33. Sunstone - Piedra De Sol -- Octavio Paz Eliot Weinberger
nobel laureate octavio paz's premier long poem Sunstone/Piedra de sol is hereprinted as a separate volume, with beautiful illustrations from eighteenth
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0811211959
Search for Author/Title Keyword Title Author Publisher ISBN Featured Books in All Scholarly Subjects African American Studies African Studies American Studies Anthologies Anthropology Architecture Asian Studies Books on Books Chicago Cinema studies Media Studies Classical studies Critical Theory/Marxism Cultural Studies Geography Performance Studies Science studies Drama Economics Education Environmental studies Feminist theory/Women's study Fiction Folktales French Stuff General Interest Highlights History African African American American East Asia Eastern European European Latin American Medieval Middle East Russian South asian Southeast Asian Historiography Misc. History Humor International relations Journals Just for Fun Latin American/Caribbean St. Law Linguistics Literary Studies Literary Criticism Referenc Literary MOSTLY Theory Literary NOT Theory Mathematics Medicine/Health/AIDS Native American Studies Philosophy Photography Poetry Political Science/Sociology (Post)colonial studies Psychology Reference Foreign language reference General Reference Religious studies Black Theology Buddhist studies Islamic studies Biblical studies - New Test Biblical studies Old Test.

34. Octavio Paz (1914-1998)
humanistic integrity. . Biography of octavio paz The nobel Foundationreviews the life and works of octavio paz. Discourse On Literature
http://www.lasculturas.com/lib/libPazOctavio.php
Home Newsletter Forum Articles ... more.. Octavio Paz (1914-1998) This Mexican poet and critic became the 1990 Nobel Prize winner "for impassioned writing with wide horizons, characterized by sensuous intelligence and humanistic integrity." Biography of Octavio Paz
The Nobel Foundation reviews the life and works of Octavio Paz.
A critical look at the modern literary industry by Octavio Paz. Fundación Octavio Paz
Dedicated to promoting the works and ideas behind the works of Octavio Paz. Brief portions of the site are in English and French. [Español] In Light of India
An excerpt from "In Light of India", published in Spanish in 1995 and in English in 1997. In Memory of Octavio Paz
Enrique Krauze reviews the life of Octavio Paz. In Search Of The Present
Octavio's 1990 Nobel lecture after winning the award. Passionate Pilgrim
Makarand Paranjape rereads Paz after his death, and wonders if poets really ever die. Wind and Water and Stone
A brief obituary and a poem by Octavio Paz. Search lasCulturas Contact: info@lasculturas.com

35. Leo Brunschwiler - Octavio Paz "Nobel Prize For Literature 1990"
Leo Brunschwiler. octavio paz nobel Prize for Literature1990 . 6 of 12 drawings to poems and essays.
http://www.leobrunschwiler.ch/english/octaviopaz.htm
Octavio Paz "Nobel Prize for Literature 1990"
6 of 12 drawings to poems and essays Publications Octavio Paz Sykomoros Galeria d‘Art Zero
Un caminar tranquilo
Quiet walking
Piedra de sol
Sun stone
Puerta del ser
Door of being (This 3 drawings are illustrations to the famous poem of Octavio Paz "Sun stone".)
(Collection G, Kassel, Germany)
Encarnado
Incarnated
to the poem "White" Espejeos Fata morgana to the poem "Nocturne of San Ildefonso" Ensayo 1 Essay 1 to the essay "The sexual alchemy and erotic courtesy" back to the top Biography Exhibitions ... FwD Home

36. Experience Literature - Poetry
Back to List octavio paz (19141998) LINKS nobel Prize Internet Archiveoctavio paz http//almaz.com/nobel/literature/1990a.html
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/introduction_literature/poetry/paz.htm
Octavio Paz
LINKS
Nobel Prize Internet Archive: Octavio Paz

http://almaz.com/nobel/literature/1990a.html
This unofficial site is designed to give you information on former Nobel Laureates and their work. Specifically, the Octavio Paz Page features a link to his workscarried in bookstores, and four featured Internet links. Also, access is provided to articles and Webpages that discuss his winning of the 1990 Nobel prize for Literature, and a catalog providing even more links added by Nobel Prize Internet Archive visitors. washintonpost.com: Octavio Paz
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/features/paz.htm
On this page you will find an article on Paz titled, "Octavio Paz, Mexico's Great Idea Man," by Marie Arana-Ward. In this reflective and insightful article, Arana-Ward muses about the man, his compassion, and his ideas. About.com: Octavio Paz (19141998)
http://latinoculture.about.com/cs/octaviopaz/
Maintained by "About.com" ("The Human Internet"), this site offers a catalog of links regarding the Nobel prize laureate. On this list is a good biography, an essay Paz gave on literature and publishing today, a link to the Octavio Paz Foundation, an online version of his Nobel lecture, and much more. A helpful place to visit if you need a large quantity of good information about the author. soulUNMADE: The Collected Poems of Octavio Paz
At this page maintained by the online literary/arts unmade magazine , you'll find an important five-page review of Paz's

37. Student Guide: Octavio Paz – Nobel Acceptance Speech
Student Guide octavio paz – nobel Acceptance Speech. 1) As paz begins his remarks,he focuses on the idea of Grace. To what does he equate this concept?
http://165.29.91.7/asms_teaching_units/Teaching_Units/Humanities/TEACHING_UNIT_M
Student Guide: Octavio Paz – Nobel Acceptance Speech As Paz begins his remarks, he focuses on the idea of Grace. To what does he equate this concept? Why is that choice an important one? As he begins his comments, he begins with language and its evolution from native to foreign cultures. What is the end result of the transplanting of language to new countries? As language is transformed into literature, a conflict arises from European and American forms of literature. According to Paz, what is the nature of this conflict? Paz contrasts American and Mexican literature. What does he see as the major difference in the evolution of these two forms? According to Paz, the decline of empires and social disturbances can coincide with what other phenomenon? How does Paz distinguish the diversity between Latin-American and Anglo-American literature? How does Paz support the idea that history is a present, rather than a past? What does Paz identify as a constant feature of our spiritual history? Where is the source of this feature? 9. Paz chooses to offer the listener/reader a personal account of his evolution towards separation.

38. Guided Questions For Discussion Of Octavio Paz’s Nobel Award Speech
Guided Questions for Discussion of octavio paz’s nobel Award Speech.With excerpts from the speech as guiding responses. 1) As
http://165.29.91.7/asms_teaching_units/Teaching_Units/Humanities/TEACHING_UNIT_M
Guided Questions for Discussion of Octavio Paz’s Nobel Award Speech With excerpts from the speech as guiding responses. As Paz begins his remarks, he focuses on ideas of Grace. What are the analogies he equates to this concept? Why is his emphasis upon this idea an important one? Grace means pardon, forgiveness, favor, benefice, inspiration; it is a form of address, a pleasing style of speaking or painting, a gesture expressing politeness, and, in short, an act that reveals spiritual goodness. Grace is gratuitous; it is a gift. The person who receives it, the favored one, is grateful for it; if he is not base, he expresses gratitude As he begins his comments, he begins with language and its evolution from native to foreign cultures. What is the end result of the transplanting of language to new countries? They very soon ceased to be mere transatlantic reflections: at times they have been the negation of the literatures of Europe; more often, they have been a reply As language is transformed into literature, a conflict arises from European and American forms of literature. According to Paz, what is the nature of this conflict?

39. Biography Of Octavio Paz
Biography of octavio paz, recipient of the 1990 nobel Prize for Literature,was born in Mexico City, Mexico. He grew up surrounded
http://ri.essortment.com/octaviopazbiog_rsut.htm
Biography of Octavio Paz
BIOGRAPHY Octavio Paz, recipient of the 1990 Nobel Prize for Literature, was born in Mexico City, Mexico. He grew up surrounded by revolutionaries as his father was the secretary of Emilio Zapata. He was educated at the University of Mexico where he studied law. Later he served as a Mexican diplomat in Paris, Japan, the United States, and India. He also served as Mexico's representative to UNESCO. bodyOffer(19035) Paz published his first volume of poetry at 19 entitled LUNA SILVESTRA. His work is influenced by Aztec mythology, Asian philosophy, and surrealism. One of his best known poems, PIEDRA DEL SOL (SUNSTONE), was published in 1957. Paz was the first Mexican to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. CHRONOLOGY He was born in Mexico City, Mexico. LUNA SILVERSTRE BAJJO TU CLARA SOMBRA Y OTROS POEMAS, NO PASARAN!, RAIZ DEL HOMBRE; He went to Spain and allied himself with the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War.; He married Elena Garro. He founded the literary review TALLER. ENTRE LA PIEDRA Y FLOR A LA ORILLA DEL MUNDO He travelled to the United States on a Guggenheim Fellowship.

40. A Tale Of Two Gardens - Octavio Paz
Return to top of the page . About the Author Mexican poet and author OctavioPaz (1914-1998) won the nobel Prize in 1990. - Return to top of the page -.
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/pazo/2gardens.htm
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A Tale of Two Gardens
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Title: A Tale of Two Gardens Author: Octavio Paz Genre: Poetry Written: Length: 111 pages Original in: Spanish Availability: A Tale of Two Gardens
  • Poems from India 1952-1995
  • "Edited and Translated by Eliot Weinberger, with additional translations by Elizabeth Bishop, Paul Blackburn, Lysander Kemp, Muriel Rukeyser, and Charles Tomlinson."
  • With an Introduction by Eliot Weinberger, and Notes by the Author.
- Return to top of the page - Our Assessment: B+ : very good pieces, interesting perspective. See our review for fuller assessment. Review Summaries Source Rating Date Reviewer The NY Times Book Rev. Raleigh Trevelyan - Return to top of the page - The complete review 's Review Octavio Paz first travelled to India in 1951, and served as Mexico's ambassador to the region in the 1960s. This collection, with pieces from across 40 years, presents the poems inspired by or in India and some of the countries surrounding it (notably Afghanistan). Varying in style, approach, and subject matter, it makes a fine overview of Paz's talents, from the longer first poem, "Mutra" to the numerous very short efforts. Well explained in the Author's Notes, the true value of the selection is in the unusual perspective on India that Paz offers. Always fascinated by the country and its culture, Paz nevertheless avoids some of the more obvious traps that so many Indiophile authors succumb to (as well as those that native writers succumb to). In many of the poems Paz compares and contrasts Mexico and India, a useful and illuminating exercise.

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