Idioma: Español
Publicado por Universidad del Salvador, San Miguel Argentina, 1975
Librería: Librería Antonio Azorín, San Lorenzo de El Escorial, M, España
EUR 17,00
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoEncuadernación de tapa blanda. Condición: Bien. Idioma español. Ejemplar en buen estado. Dimensiones: 23x16 - (221-505 pp.).
Publicado por Buenos Aires Publicación del Instituto de Estudios Argentinos I.D.E.A., 1965
Librería: Chaco 4ever Books, Montevideo, MO, Uruguay
Revista / Publicación
EUR 443,13
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoEncuadernación de tapa blanda. Condición: Muy bien. In-8. #1 Dic 1965. (All published). Wrappers. Collaborators : Juan Carlos Portantiero, Ismael Viñas, Rodolfo Walsh, Susana Fiorito, José Vazeilles, Rafael Filippelli. Traducción de Hamza Alavi. In December 1965, the first issue - which would also be the only one - of Nueva Politica appeared in Buenos Aires, a publication that presented itself as "a magazine of coincidences from a nationalist, revolutionary and socialist perspective." In the Editorial Board, the dominant presence of Ismael Viñas was noticed: several of the members - his brother David, Noé Jitrik, León Rozitchner - who had accompanied Contorno years ago and others were members of the National Liberation Movement of which Viñas was recognized as main leader. But there were other components, such as Juan Carlos Portantiero and Eduardo Jozami, dissidents from the Communist Party, and also a writer who could then be described as independent: Rodolfo Walsh.That the magazine was not an isolated phenomenon is evidenced by other publications in those last months of 1965. The sixth issue of the Armored Rose which expressed a significant dissidence of communist intellectuals headed by José Luis Mangieri, Alberto Brocato, Juan Gelman and Andrés Rivera published "Socialism and the man in Cuba", the letter sent by Che Guevara to the director of the magazine Marcha de Montevideo that would become the ethical ideology of the new left, but also the "Bases for a revolutionary cultural policy" of John William Cooke, who after several years of stay in Havana, exercised an important influence among many Peronist militants, stimulating openness to left thinking. In Córdoba, José Aricó had directed Pasado y Presente for two years, another publication of those excluded from the CP, open both to theoretical debate on "the ways of the revolution" and to the new developments of a Marxism that did not exclude dialogue with the structuralism or psychoanalysis. But not only are publications flourishing, but militant groups are emerging. At the University (and even in certain union sectors) the new left, sometimes linked to groups of revolutionary Peronism, began to have a presence. However, in order not to exaggerate its real political influence, it is convenient to turn to another publication, Literatura y Revolución, whose initial issue appeared in October of the same year, directed by Sergio Camarda and Ricardo Piglia. In Argentina, in 1965, leftist intellectuals are harmless. Scattered, from time to time confronted in rhetorical disputes, sweetly fond of our chapels, we exercise careful ineffectiveness. We do show an admirable goodwill: we sign manifestos, we travel to socialist countries, our books are brave, "Piglia declared in the editorial, to conclude by pointing out among so many limitations the most difficult to accept:" We suffer from the justified indifference of the only class to the one that we entrust our liberation. They are there, alien like the forests . Tarcus p57. F4.