Elena Garro
Elena Garro (December 11, 1916 – August 22, 1998) was a Mexican author, playwright, screenwriter, journalist, short story writer, and novelist. She has been described as one of the pioneers and an early leading figure of the
Magical Realism movement, though she rejected this affiliation. Alongside the works of
Juan Rulfo, her first three books: ''Un hogar sólido'' (1958), ''Los Recuerdos del Porvenir'' (1963)'','' and ''La Semana de Colores'' (1964)'','' are considered to be among the earliest examples of
Magical Realism in Latin American literature. Garro's writing, despite being mostly fictional prose, borrowed heavily from poetry and its literary elements. Author and biographer
Patricia Rosas Lopategui has described Garro's style as "an attempt to rescue the use of everyday language in the form of poetry". Her style has also been compared to that of French writers like
Georges Schéhadé,
Jean Genet, as well as Romanian-French playwright
Eugène Ionesco, due to the surreal nature of her stories. A close friend of
Albert Camus, her works were also heavily influenced by his style and
philosophy. She was the recipient of the
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Prize in 1996.
Her tumultuos marriage with writer
Octavio Paz, winner of the
1990 Nobel Prize in Literature, has been the subject of much scrutiny. Garro herself would describe the relationship as "filled with forbiddance, resentments, and rancour for not making each other happy". Despite the hostilities, they are considered among the most talented couple of writers to emerge during the
Latin American literary boom of the twentieth century.
Garro is seen as one of the unsung figures of the
boom; her legacy was influenced, in part, by her rejection of
Magical Realism as she considered the term "a cheap marketing label". Contemporary historians and literary biographers consider her work as seminal and view her as having been as important as figures like
Juan Rulfo,
Gabriel García Márquez,
Julio Cortazar, and others.
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