Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1968) was an Argentine short-story writer, essayist and poet who, along with Gabriel Marquez and Elizabeth Allende, is considered one of the founders of Magical Realism, a mode of fiction writing popular especially in South America which integrates fantasy with otherwise traditional styles of storytelling. As with his fiction, Borges’ poetry included much of the same interest in the nature and peculiarity of language, and the interplay of fact and fantasy. Several times he was shortlisted for the Nobel Prize, but never won it, which some critics believe was a result of his conservative political views — even though he was an outspoken critic of fascism (and communism), anti-Semitism, and his own country’s history of injustice.
Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1968) was an Argentine short-story writer, essayist and poet who, along with Gabriel Marquez and Elizabeth Allende, is considered one of the founders of Magical Realism, a mode of fiction writing popular especially in South America which integrates fantasy with otherwise traditional styles of storytelling. As with his fiction, Borges’ poetry included much of the same interest in the nature and peculiarity of language, and the interplay of fact and fantasy. Several times he was shortlisted for the Nobel Prize, but never won it, which some critics believe was a result of his conservative political views — even though he was an outspoken critic of fascism (and communism), anti-Semitism, and his own country’s history of injustice.
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