Mariano Azuela
Mariano Azuela
The Mexican novelist Mariano Azuela (1873-1952) initiated the novel of the Mexican Revolution, employing realism as a means of denouncing social injustices.
Mariano Azuela was born on Jan. 1, 1873, in Lagos de Moreno, in the state of Jalisco, where he received his primary education. Later he went to Guadalajara, the state capital, to pursue a career as a surgeon in the institute which had replaced the University of Jalisco.
Dr. Azuela's literary career began in 1896 with the publication in a Mexico City newspaper of a series of articles entitled Impresiones de un estudiante (A Student's Impressions). In 1907 he published his first novel, Maria Luisa, followed by Los fracasados (The Failures) in 1908 and Mala yerba (Weeds) in 1909. The theme of these novels was fate, continued in Esa sangre (That Blood), a posthumous novel published in 1956.
Having completed his medical studies, Dr. Azuela began practicing in Jalisco, where he acquired a drugstore and established his home. When Francisco I. Madero was elected president of Mexico in 1911, Dr. Azuela became mayor of Lagos and then director of education in Jalisco.
He became disillusioned with politics, however, and published Andrés Pérez, maderista (1911), his first novel on the theme of the Revolution; this was followed in 1912 by Sin amor (Without Love). With the downfall of President Madero, Azuela, persecuted by his enemies, joined the revolutionary forces of Julián Medina as a doctor and witnessed many aspects of the bloody struggle. When they were defeated, he emigrated to El Paso, Tex., and there in 1915 he wrote Los de abajo (The underdogs ), his most famous novel. Its literary merit was not recognized until 1925; since then it has gone through many editions and been translated into numerous languages.
Many other novels about the Revolution followed. In 1917 Dr. Azuela moved to Mexico City, where he worked in a public dispensary, at the same time making penetrating observations of life among the lower classes, which he later used in many of his works.
In 1943 he began giving lectures in the Colegio Nacional on Mexican, French, and Spanish novelists, as well as recounting his own literary experiences. Several of his novels were dramatized, and others were made into movies. He retired after practicing medicine for 25 years.
In 1949 he won the National Prize for Literature. He died in Mexico City on March 1, 1952, and was buried there in the Panteón Civil in the Rotunda of Illustrious Men.
Further Reading
Azuela's contribution to the modern Mexican novel is assessed in Joseph Sommers, After the Storm: Landmarks of the Modern Mexican Novel (1968). See also John S. Brushwood, Mexico in Its Novel: A Nation's Search for Identity (1966).
Additional Sources
Herbst, Gerhard R., Mexican society as seen by Mariano Azuela, New York: Abra Ediciones, 1977. □
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A bibliographical list of cuneiform inscriptions from Canaan, Palestine/Philistia, and the land of Israel.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...from well-known texts such as the Taanach letters, which have been studied and translated a number of times (Taanach 1-2, 5-6), to mere scraps of...inscribed objects come from three sites: Taanach (17), Hazor (15), and Aphek...
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; ...two sites, Kuntillet 'Ajrud and Khirbet el-Kom, along with reexamination of the cult stand from Taanach (see his Excursus 2 on the Taanach cult stand). Miller believes that the feminine dimension may be found in Yahweh himself, but he also...
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Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 7/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...inspection of three-dimensional iconographic material such as the Taanach cult stands, which reveals significant details missed by earlier...Qom and K. 'Ajrud data, the cult-stands from Pella and Taanach, and the "concubine" goddess figurines, go far beyond any...
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The Cult of Asherah in Ancient Israel and Judah: Evidence for Hebrew Goddess
Magazine article from: Near Eastern Archaeology; 12/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...the Lachish Fosse Temple. Also included are the gold plaque from the Lachish Summit Temple, the cult stands from Pella and Taanach, and the vast assemblage of terracotta plaque and pillar figurines found at numerous sites throughout the region. When discussing...
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Books received--2005.
Magazine article from: Hebrew Studies Journal; 1/1/2005; 700+ words
; ...Cochavi-Rainey, Zippora. [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII.] (To the King my Lord: Letters from El-Amarna, Kumidu, Taanach and other letters from the fourteenth century B.C.E.). Pp. xxx + 345. Jerusalem: The Bialik Institute, 2005. Paper...
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Digging and death Even archaeology can be deadly in the Holy Land, says Charles Thomas
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 7/8/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...murder of an American citizen. The simplest explanation could be that Dr Glock, who worked for years at Tell Ti'innik - "Taanach" in the Bible, and now a village on the Jordanian border - was promoting interpretations of the Holy Land's remote past...
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Canaanite in the Amarna Tablets: A Linguistic Analysis of the Mixed Dialect used by Scribes from Canaan.(Review)
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...second half of the fourteenth century. That this system was also used in the fifteenth century is shown by the letter from Taanach. The prefix conjugation of Canaanite can be divided into two modes, the indicative for tenses and the injunctive for "volition...
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No Graven Image? Israelite Aniconism in Its Ancient Near Eastern Context
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 10/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...criteria for a cultic context, M. examines Iron Age Arad, Lachish, Beth-shemesh, the "Bull Site," Tirzah, Megiddo, Taanach, and Tel Dan for standing stones. For the origin of this cult, he considers cultic masseebot in the Uvda Valley and Timna...
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Israelite identity and personal names from the book of judges.(Report)
Magazine article from: Hebrew Studies Journal; 1/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...millennium Amorite occurrences of the second element in personal names, it also is found in personal names at Ugarit and at Late Bronze Age Taanach. (10) Thus the similarities in the personal names and the structure point toward a secon
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Taanach
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Taanach , in the Bible, royal city of Canaan, central ancient Palestine, the modern Tell Ti'innik, West Bank, SE of Megiddo. Sisera...
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Sisera
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
Sisera Commander of an army opposing Israel (Judg. 4–5). The decisive battle was fought at Taanach; a sudden storm of rain and rising flood waters were Israel's salvation and Sisera' forces were routed. Sisera sought refuge...
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Tanach
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Tanach , variant of Taanach .
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