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Imagen de la Vida en las ''Coplas a la Muerte de Merton'', de Ernesto Cardenal

open access: yesRevista Chilena de Literatura, 2016
María Elena Claro
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Political Poetry and the Example of Ernesto Cardenal [PDF]

open access: possibleCritical Inquiry, 1987
Perhaps the subject of political poetry is so inextricable from specific poems and poets at particular historical moments that one can discuss only examples. Ernesto Cardenal is an interesting one, not least because the cause for which he long spoke, the release of the Nicaraguan peasantry from the oppressive burdens of economic exploitation and ...
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Remembering Ernesto Cardenal

Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas, 2020
The first time I met Ernesto Cardenal in person was at the Center for Inter-American Relations (now Americas Society) on Park Avenue in New York. It was 1974.
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Exodo y fundaciones en " Quetzalcôatl " (1985) de Ernesto Cardenal

América, 2006
"Exode et fondations dans 'Quetzalcoatl' (1985), d'Ernesto Cardenal". L'exode toltèque et les diverses fondations qu'il occasionne forment un mythème persistant dans la tradition poétique nicaraguayenne, en particulier à partir de Pablo Antonio Cuadra. Dans un long poème intitulé "Quetzalcoatl" (1985), Ernesto Cardenal revisite mythe et histoire à
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The Colonial Legacy in Ernesto Cardenal's Poetry: Images of Quetzalcoatl, Nezahualcoyotl, and the Aztecs

Hispania, 2004
In his poetry, Cardenal presents the Aztecs as a symbol of evil due to their militarism and practice of human sacrifice, whule the two pre-Hispanie Mexican heroes, Quetzalcoatl and Nezahualcoyotl, symbolize righteousness because of their peaceful religious and civilized practices.
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