Deep Rivers
Novel by José María Arguedas / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Deep Rivers (Spanish: Los ríos profundos) is the third novel by Peruvian writer José María Arguedas. It was published by Losada in Buenos Aires in 1958, received the Peruvian National Culture Award (Premio Nacional de Cultura) in 1959, and was a finalist in the William Faulkner Foundation Ibo-American award (1963). Since then, critical interest in the work of Arguedas has grown, and the book has been translated into several languages.[1]
Author | José María Arguedas |
---|---|
Original title | Los ríos profundos |
Translator | Frances Horning Barraclough |
Country | Peru |
Language | Spanish |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Losada (Buenos Aires) |
Publication date | 1958 |
Published in English | 1987 |
Media type | |
ISBN | 978-0292715332 |
Preceded by | Diamantes y pedernales (1954) |
Followed by | El Sexto (1961) |
According to critics, this novel marked the beginning of the current neo-indigenista movement, which presented, for the first time, a reading of indigenous issues from a closer perspective. Most critics agree that this novel is one of Arguedas' masterpieces.[citation needed]
The title of the work ('Uku Mayu' in Quechua) alludes to the depth of the Andean rivers, which rise in the top of the Andes. It also relates to the solid and ancestral roots of Andean culture, which, according to Arguedas, are the true national identity of Peru.