Ángel Rama

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Ángel Rama (1926 -November 27, 1983) was a Uruguayan writer, academic, and literary critic, known for his work on modernismo and for his theorization of the concept of "transculturation."

Born in Montevideo to Galician immigrants, Rama studied at the College de France of the University of Paris. In the 1960s, after several years teaching at the secondary and university level, he became director of the department of Hispanoamerican literature at the University of Montevideo. He held professorships at numerous universities in Europe and the Americas, founded the publishing house Editorial Arca, and served as literary adviser to the Ayacucho Library in Caracas. A member of Uruguay's Generation of '45, also known as the "Critical Generation", he contributed frequently to the weekly review Marcha until its suppression in 1974 by the military government of Juan María Bordaberry. One of his best-remembered quotes, "Uruguay made me" (delivered in English), is found in "The Intellectual Lesson of Marcha", which he wrote following the review's suppression under Bordaberry [1]. He died in a plane crash at Barajas Airport, along with his wife and eminent art historian Marta Traba, the Mexican writer Jorge Ibargüengoitia, and Peruvian poet Manuel Scorza.

[edit] Works

  • Los contestatarios del poder
  • La novela latinoamericana 1920-1980
  • Transulturación narrativa en América Latina (1982)
  • La ciudad letrada (1984)
  • Diario 1970-1983 (posthumous)

[edit] References and Links

  1. ^ Carlos Sánchez Lozano, Ángel Rama: otra época, otra épica. Revista Universidad de Antioquía 277 (July - Sept 2005).


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