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Jorge Ibargüengoitia

Jorge Ibargüengoitia Antillón (January 22, 1928 – November 27, 1983) was a Mexican novelist and playwright who achieved great popular and critical success with his satires, three of which have appeared in English: The Dead Girls, Two Crimes, and The Lightning of August. His plays include Susana y los Jóvenes and Ante varias esfinges, both dating from the 1950s. His work also includes short stories and chronicles[1] and is currently considered one of the most influential writers in Latin American literature[2]

Jorge Ibargüengoitia
BornJorge Ibargüengoitia Antillón
(1928-01-22)22 January 1928
Guanajuato, Guanajuato
Died27 November 1983(1983-11-27) (aged 55)
Mejorada del Campo, Madrid, Spain
OccupationWriter
LanguageSpanish
NationalityMexican
Alma materNational Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)
Period1964-1983
GenreNovel
Notable worksLos relámpagos de agosto (1964)
SpouseJoy Laville

 Literature portal

Ibargüengoitia was born in Guanajuato, Mexico. In 1955, he received a Rockefeller grant to study in New York City; five years later he received the Mexico City literary award. He died in Avianca Flight 011, which crashed on November 27, 1983, while it attempted to land in Madrid, Spain.

Biography

Jorge Ibargüengoitia was born in 1928 in the city of Guanajuato. His father, Alejandro Ibargüengoitia Cumming, died when he was eight months old. His mother, María de la Luz Antillón, moved with Jorge to Mexico City to be close to her family after losing her husband, so Ibargüengoitia was brought up by his mother and by other women of her family.[3][4] During his early education, he studied in schools that belonged to the Marist Brothers and was a boy scout.[5] In 1947 he attended the Jamboree (the annual reunion of the Scouts), in which he travelled through France, Italy, Switzerland and England for three months.[6] The painter Manuel Felguérez, a friend who went to the same trip, told years later that both had considered the trip an amazing experience and had decided that they should do something with their lives that allowed them to continue travelling.[5]

Due to family pressure, Ibargüengoitia started studying engineering at UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico) in 1945, although he dropped out in 1949 before finishing his studies.[7] He wrote: "I grew up surrounded by women who adored me. They wanted me to be an engineer: they had had money, but had lost it and hoped I would make up for it [...] When I had two years left to finish the engineering degree, I decided to drop out to focus on writing. The women of the house spent 15 years bemoaning that decision [...] Later on they got used to it".[8] After dropping out, he moved back to the state of Guanajuato, where his family still had lands.[5]

During that time, Ibargüengoitia met Salvador Novo, who was mounting a play at Teatro Juárez, in the city of Guanajuato. This meeting caused such an impression on Ibargüengoitia that he decided to return to Mexico City and enrol at the Faculty of Philosophy at UNAM,[3][6] where he graduated with a specialization in Dramatic Arts.[7][3] One of his teachers was Rodolfo Usigli.[6][9]

After he finished his studies, Ibargüengoitia started teaching. He even got his teacher Rodolfo Usigli's position, together with Luisa Josefina Hernández, when Usigli retired.[3] He started to apply for and win scholarships too, including a Rockefeller scholarship for a stay in New York in 1955,[7] to continue with his literary career.[3]

Ibargüengoitia moved to a house in Coyoacán (by then an unkept and hard to reach district of Mexico City) in 1957 together with his mother and aunt.[5] He met the artist Joy Laville in 1963 or 1964 in a bookstore in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, and got married in 1973 after a few years together.[6] They lived in Coyoacán until the death of Ibargüengoitia's mother, after which they decided to travel around Europe. They settled permanently in Paris in 1980.[6]

Literary career

Theatre

While he was still a student of Dramatic Arts, in 1953, Ibargüengoitia wrote several plays to moderate acclaim, but which seemed to promise a successful career in theatre, such as Susana y los jóvenes, La lucha con el ángel, Clotilde en su casa, the children's comedy El peluquero del rey, Llegó Margó and Ante varias esfinges.[5] After graduation he continued writing plays, although they had much less success; in 1959 he wrote the comedies El viaje superficial and Pájaro en mano; in 1960 he wrote La conspiración vendida per Salvador Novo's request (even though it never premiered, Ibargüengoitia sent it to a literary contest under a pseudonym and won Mexico City's Prize), Los buenos manejos, La fuga de Nicanor, La farsa del valiente Nicolás and Rigoberto entre las ranas, and from 1961 is El amor de Sarita y el profesor Rocafuerte.[5]

His already debilitated link to the theatre due to the lack of success with his plays got further damaged in the beginning of the 1960s when Roberto Usigli was asked in an interview by Elena Poniatowska to name his favourite students and he did not mention Ibargüengoitia. He took the snub to heart, as he was sure he had been one of the most distinguished students of Usigli's class.[5]

Between 1961 and 1964 Ibargüengoitia wrote reviews of theatre plays for Revista de la Universidad (University's Magazine). His reviews were often controversial, as he was not afraid to write negative reviews on playwrights who were considered untouchable.[5] His negative reviews of two plays by Alfonso Reyes caused such controversy among the Mexican literary circles that Ibargüengoitia decided to leave the job.[5]

In 1962 he wrote his last play, El atentado, with which he won the Casa de las Américas Prize.[5]

Novels

During the 1950s, Ibargüengoitia started to read about the Mexican Revolution, particularly the autobiographies of many of the main people that took part in it.[5] While he was doing research for El atentado, Ibargüengoitia got the idea to write a novel about the Mexican Revolution; this is how he came up with Los Relámpagos de Agosto (1964), a fictional story based on the last phase of the revolution and the forming of the political groups that would dominate Mexican politics for most of the twentieth century. The novel won the Casa de las Américas Prize, and in it, the style that would characterise most of his further work was already present: taking real-life stories and subjecting them to a whimsical, sardonic treatment.[9]

His next book, La ley de Herodes (1967), is a collection of short stories, most of which are clearly based on details from his own life. He describes, among many other events, the misadventures of getting a mortgage in Mexico and his experiences at Columbia University's International House. Like his novels, these stories combine farce, sexual peccadilloes, and humor. Maten al león (1969), although set on an imaginary island, is a novel mirroring the Latin American dictatorships; its details are comic but the end is dark. Estas ruinas que ves (1975) is a farce based on realistic details of academic life that are still visible in early 21st century Guanajuato: the clanging of church bells disconcerting a speaker, cutting the ribbon at museum openings, the set of cultural movers and shakers who have known each other since kindergarten.

For Las Muertas (1977) he turned to the most outrageous criminals of his native state: the brothel-keepers Delfina and María de Jesús González, whose decade-long careers as serial killers emerged in 1964. Dos crímenes (1979) is a novel about a man who is being prosecuted by the police and runs away to hide in his rich uncle's house, where intrigue, suspicions and relationships unravel among he and his family members. His last novel, Los pasos de López, was published in 1982 and it is a fictional memoir whose characters are based on Miguel Hidalgo and the members of the Querétaro conspiracy of 1810. These three novels are unofficially called the "Plan de Abajo trilogy" because they all take place in the fictional region of Plan de Abajo, which is very similar to Ibargüengoitia's native state of Guanajuato.[10]

Ibargüengoitia died before he finished his seventh novel, which would have been set in the period of the Second Mexican Empire of Maximilian I and Carlota of Mexico. It was never published.[6]

Weekly columns

Ibargüengoitia was also known for his weekly columns in the Mexico City newspaper Excelsior, and later on in the magazines Vuelta and Proceso,[5] which have been collected in a half dozen paperback volumes.

Influences and style

Ibargüengoitia cited Evelyn Waugh and Louis-Ferdinand Céline as his most influential authors.[4]

He is considered one of the first writers who "demystified the contents of the history of Mexico" and humanised its heroic figures,[6] through his use of irony, farce, humour and even grotesque depictions. The periods that most interested him were the Independence of Mexico and the Mexican Revolution.[11]

Aside from historical periods, Ibargüengoitia often wrote about details, anecdotes and problems of his daily life. His native state of Guanajuato was also frequently used as a set for his stories, although he almost always used fictional names, such as Cuévano, Plan de Abajo, Muérdago or Pedrones, to stand in for it or its cities.[12]

The writer has been quoted as saying he never meant to make anyone laugh, that he thought laughter was useless and a pointless waste of time.[13]

Death and legacy

In 1983, Ibargüengoitia was invited by Gabriel García Márquez to the First Encounter of Hispanic-American Culture in Bogota, Colombia.[6] Even though he had initially declined to attend, he changed his mind at the last minute[14] and boarded Avianca Flight 011 that departed from Paris and was due to land in Madrid. The plane, a Boeing 747, crashed near the Madrid-Barajas airport as it attempted to land, on November 27, 1983.[15] He perished along with Peruvian poet Manuel Scorza, Uruguayan critic Ángel Rama, Argentinian academic Marta Traba, and 177 others.

He is buried in Antillon Park in Guanajuato, named in honor of his great-grandfather General Florencio Antillón, and where a talavera plaque marks his remains. In translation, it says simply, "Here lies Jorge Ibargüengoitia in the park of his great-grandfather, who fought against the French."[16]

According to his publisher, Ibargüengoitia's books are still well received in libraries and bookstores,[6] and his work has received renewed attention in the past years thanks to the effort of scholars and writers like Juan Villoro and Sergio González Rodríguez.[17] His personal archive is at the Firestone Library of Princeton University.[18]

Bibliography

Drama

  • La lucha con el ángel (1955).
  • Clotilde en su casa, also titled Un adulterio exquisito (1955). Published in Teatro mexicano del siglo XX. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica (1956).
  • Ante varias esfinges (1959).
  • El viaje superficial (1960). Published in Revista Mexicana de Literatura, June-September, 1960.
  • La conspiración vendida (1960).
  • El atentado (1963).
  • Los buenos manejos (1980).
  • Obras de Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Teatro I. Includes: «Susana y los jóvenes», «Clotilde en su casa» and «La lucha con el ángel». México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1989).
  • Obras de Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Teatro II. Includes: «Llegó Margó», «Ante varias esfinges», «El loco amor viene», «El tesoro perdido» and «Dos crímenes». México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1989).
  • Obra de Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Teatro III. Includes: «El viaje superficial», «Pájaro en mano», «Los buenos manejos», «La conspiración vendida» and «El atentado». México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1990).

Novels

  • Los relámpagos de agosto. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1965). (English translation: The Lightning of August, 1986)
  • Maten al león. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1969).
  • Estas ruinas que ves. México: Novaro, (1974).
  • Las muertas. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1977). (English translation: The Dead Girls, 2018)
  • Dos crímenes. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1979). (English translation: Two Crimes, 1984)
  • Los pasos de López. México: Océano, (1982).

Short story collections

  • La ley de Herodes y otros cuentos. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1967).
  • Piezas y cuentos para niños. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1990).
  • El ratón del supermercado y... otros cuentos. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, (2005).
  • El niño Triclinio y la bella Dorotea. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, (2008).

Essays

  • Teatro mexicano contemporáneo. Madrid: Aguilar, (1957).
  • Sálvese quien pueda. México: Novaro, (1975).

Article collections

  • Viajes en la América Ignota. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1972).
  • Autopsias rápidas. México: Vuelta, (1988).
  • Instrucciones para vivir en México. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1990).
  • La casa de usted y otros viajes. México: Joaquín Mortiz, (1991).

Films based on his books

  • Maten al león (1975), directed by José Estrada
  • Las Poquianchis (1976), directed by Felipe Cazals
  • Estas ruinas que ves (1978), directed by Julian Pastor
  • Maten al león (1991), TV film directed by Jorge Alí Triana
  • Dos crímenes (1993), directed by Roberto Sneider

Awards

  • Theatre Prize Ciudad de México for La conspiración vendida (1960)[19]
  • Theatre Prize Casa de las Américas for El atentado (1963)[19]
  • Novel Prize Casa de las Américas for Los relámpagos de agosto (1964)[19]
  • International Novel Prize México for Estas ruinas que ves (1975)[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ Castañeda, Jaime (1986). "Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Humorismo y Narrativa" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Jorge Ibargüengoitia". PlanetadeLibros (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Jorge Ibargüengoitia, breve biografía". México Desconocido (in Spanish). 2021-01-22. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  4. ^ a b González, Enric (2014). "Instrucciones para leer a Jorge Ibargüengoitia".
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Secci, M. Cristina (2022). "Rompecabezas: vida y obra de Jorge Ibargüengoitia" (PDF).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i "La vida sin Jorge Ibargüengoitia; 30 aniversario luctuoso". Excélsior (in Spanish). 2013-11-24. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  7. ^ a b c Castañeda, Jaime (1986). "Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Humorismo y Narrativa" (PDF).
  8. ^ "Jorge Ibargüengoitia. Los giros de su vida". www.clublectores.com. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  9. ^ a b Pitol, Sergio. "Jorge Ibargüengoitia" (PDF).
  10. ^ "Estas ruinas que ves - Detalle de la obra - Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México - FLM - CONACULTA". www.elem.mx. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  11. ^ Domenella, Ana Rosa (2005). "Jorge Ibargüengoitia y la historia de México. Entre la fascinación y la farsa". Signos Literarios. 1 (1). ISSN 1870-4050.
  12. ^ "Jorge Ibargüengoitia (1928-1983). En la antesala del centenario de su natalicio" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Retrato de Jorge Ibargüengoitia". cultura.nexos.com.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  14. ^ González, Enric (2007-12-22). "Un sarcástico incurable". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-02-23.
  16. ^ "Poca atención para aniversario luctuoso de Jorge Ibargüengoitia". PortalGuanajuato.MX (in Spanish). 2013-11-26. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  17. ^ "Jorge Ibargüengoitia (1928-1983). En la antesala del centenario de su natalicio" (PDF).
  18. ^ "Jorge Ibargüengoitia Papers, 1923-2008 (mostly 1954-1984) - Finding Aids". findingaids.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  19. ^ a b c d "Jorge Ibargüengoitia". Agencia Literaria Carmen Balcells. Retrieved 2022-10-26.

jorge, ibargüengoitia, antillón, january, 1928, november, 1983, mexican, novelist, playwright, achieved, great, popular, critical, success, with, satires, three, which, have, appeared, english, dead, girls, crimes, lightning, august, plays, include, susana, jó. Jorge Ibarguengoitia Antillon January 22 1928 November 27 1983 was a Mexican novelist and playwright who achieved great popular and critical success with his satires three of which have appeared in English The Dead Girls Two Crimes and The Lightning of August His plays include Susana y los Jovenes and Ante varias esfinges both dating from the 1950s His work also includes short stories and chronicles 1 and is currently considered one of the most influential writers in Latin American literature 2 Jorge IbarguengoitiaBornJorge Ibarguengoitia Antillon 1928 01 22 22 January 1928Guanajuato GuanajuatoDied27 November 1983 1983 11 27 aged 55 Mejorada del Campo Madrid SpainOccupationWriterLanguageSpanishNationalityMexicanAlma materNational Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM Period1964 1983GenreNovelNotable worksLos relampagos de agosto 1964 SpouseJoy Laville Literature portalIbarguengoitia was born in Guanajuato Mexico In 1955 he received a Rockefeller grant to study in New York City five years later he received the Mexico City literary award He died in Avianca Flight 011 which crashed on November 27 1983 while it attempted to land in Madrid Spain Contents 1 Biography 2 Literary career 2 1 Theatre 2 2 Novels 2 3 Weekly columns 2 4 Influences and style 3 Death and legacy 4 Bibliography 4 1 Drama 4 2 Novels 4 3 Short story collections 4 4 Essays 4 5 Article collections 4 6 Films based on his books 5 Awards 6 See also 7 ReferencesBiography EditJorge Ibarguengoitia was born in 1928 in the city of Guanajuato His father Alejandro Ibarguengoitia Cumming died when he was eight months old His mother Maria de la Luz Antillon moved with Jorge to Mexico City to be close to her family after losing her husband so Ibarguengoitia was brought up by his mother and by other women of her family 3 4 During his early education he studied in schools that belonged to the Marist Brothers and was a boy scout 5 In 1947 he attended the Jamboree the annual reunion of the Scouts in which he travelled through France Italy Switzerland and England for three months 6 The painter Manuel Felguerez a friend who went to the same trip told years later that both had considered the trip an amazing experience and had decided that they should do something with their lives that allowed them to continue travelling 5 Due to family pressure Ibarguengoitia started studying engineering at UNAM National Autonomous University of Mexico in 1945 although he dropped out in 1949 before finishing his studies 7 He wrote I grew up surrounded by women who adored me They wanted me to be an engineer they had had money but had lost it and hoped I would make up for it When I had two years left to finish the engineering degree I decided to drop out to focus on writing The women of the house spent 15 years bemoaning that decision Later on they got used to it 8 After dropping out he moved back to the state of Guanajuato where his family still had lands 5 During that time Ibarguengoitia met Salvador Novo who was mounting a play at Teatro Juarez in the city of Guanajuato This meeting caused such an impression on Ibarguengoitia that he decided to return to Mexico City and enrol at the Faculty of Philosophy at UNAM 3 6 where he graduated with a specialization in Dramatic Arts 7 3 One of his teachers was Rodolfo Usigli 6 9 After he finished his studies Ibarguengoitia started teaching He even got his teacher Rodolfo Usigli s position together with Luisa Josefina Hernandez when Usigli retired 3 He started to apply for and win scholarships too including a Rockefeller scholarship for a stay in New York in 1955 7 to continue with his literary career 3 Ibarguengoitia moved to a house in Coyoacan by then an unkept and hard to reach district of Mexico City in 1957 together with his mother and aunt 5 He met the artist Joy Laville in 1963 or 1964 in a bookstore in San Miguel de Allende Guanajuato and got married in 1973 after a few years together 6 They lived in Coyoacan until the death of Ibarguengoitia s mother after which they decided to travel around Europe They settled permanently in Paris in 1980 6 Literary career EditTheatre Edit While he was still a student of Dramatic Arts in 1953 Ibarguengoitia wrote several plays to moderate acclaim but which seemed to promise a successful career in theatre such as Susana y los jovenes La lucha con el angel Clotilde en su casa the children s comedy El peluquero del rey Llego Margo and Ante varias esfinges 5 After graduation he continued writing plays although they had much less success in 1959 he wrote the comedies El viaje superficial and Pajaro en mano in 1960 he wrote La conspiracion vendida per Salvador Novo s request even though it never premiered Ibarguengoitia sent it to a literary contest under a pseudonym and won Mexico City s Prize Los buenos manejos La fuga de Nicanor La farsa del valiente Nicolas and Rigoberto entre las ranas and from 1961 is El amor de Sarita y el profesor Rocafuerte 5 His already debilitated link to the theatre due to the lack of success with his plays got further damaged in the beginning of the 1960s when Roberto Usigli was asked in an interview by Elena Poniatowska to name his favourite students and he did not mention Ibarguengoitia He took the snub to heart as he was sure he had been one of the most distinguished students of Usigli s class 5 Between 1961 and 1964 Ibarguengoitia wrote reviews of theatre plays for Revista de la Universidad University s Magazine His reviews were often controversial as he was not afraid to write negative reviews on playwrights who were considered untouchable 5 His negative reviews of two plays by Alfonso Reyes caused such controversy among the Mexican literary circles that Ibarguengoitia decided to leave the job 5 In 1962 he wrote his last play El atentado with which he won the Casa de las Americas Prize 5 Novels Edit During the 1950s Ibarguengoitia started to read about the Mexican Revolution particularly the autobiographies of many of the main people that took part in it 5 While he was doing research for El atentado Ibarguengoitia got the idea to write a novel about the Mexican Revolution this is how he came up with Los Relampagos de Agosto 1964 a fictional story based on the last phase of the revolution and the forming of the political groups that would dominate Mexican politics for most of the twentieth century The novel won the Casa de las Americas Prize and in it the style that would characterise most of his further work was already present taking real life stories and subjecting them to a whimsical sardonic treatment 9 His next book La ley de Herodes 1967 is a collection of short stories most of which are clearly based on details from his own life He describes among many other events the misadventures of getting a mortgage in Mexico and his experiences at Columbia University s International House Like his novels these stories combine farce sexual peccadilloes and humor Maten al leon 1969 although set on an imaginary island is a novel mirroring the Latin American dictatorships its details are comic but the end is dark Estas ruinas que ves 1975 is a farce based on realistic details of academic life that are still visible in early 21st century Guanajuato the clanging of church bells disconcerting a speaker cutting the ribbon at museum openings the set of cultural movers and shakers who have known each other since kindergarten For Las Muertas 1977 he turned to the most outrageous criminals of his native state the brothel keepers Delfina and Maria de Jesus Gonzalez whose decade long careers as serial killers emerged in 1964 Dos crimenes 1979 is a novel about a man who is being prosecuted by the police and runs away to hide in his rich uncle s house where intrigue suspicions and relationships unravel among he and his family members His last novel Los pasos de Lopez was published in 1982 and it is a fictional memoir whose characters are based on Miguel Hidalgo and the members of the Queretaro conspiracy of 1810 These three novels are unofficially called the Plan de Abajo trilogy because they all take place in the fictional region of Plan de Abajo which is very similar to Ibarguengoitia s native state of Guanajuato 10 Ibarguengoitia died before he finished his seventh novel which would have been set in the period of the Second Mexican Empire of Maximilian I and Carlota of Mexico It was never published 6 Weekly columns Edit Ibarguengoitia was also known for his weekly columns in the Mexico City newspaper Excelsior and later on in the magazines Vuelta and Proceso 5 which have been collected in a half dozen paperback volumes Influences and style Edit Ibarguengoitia cited Evelyn Waugh and Louis Ferdinand Celine as his most influential authors 4 He is considered one of the first writers who demystified the contents of the history of Mexico and humanised its heroic figures 6 through his use of irony farce humour and even grotesque depictions The periods that most interested him were the Independence of Mexico and the Mexican Revolution 11 Aside from historical periods Ibarguengoitia often wrote about details anecdotes and problems of his daily life His native state of Guanajuato was also frequently used as a set for his stories although he almost always used fictional names such as Cuevano Plan de Abajo Muerdago or Pedrones to stand in for it or its cities 12 The writer has been quoted as saying he never meant to make anyone laugh that he thought laughter was useless and a pointless waste of time 13 Death and legacy EditIn 1983 Ibarguengoitia was invited by Gabriel Garcia Marquez to the First Encounter of Hispanic American Culture in Bogota Colombia 6 Even though he had initially declined to attend he changed his mind at the last minute 14 and boarded Avianca Flight 011 that departed from Paris and was due to land in Madrid The plane a Boeing 747 crashed near the Madrid Barajas airport as it attempted to land on November 27 1983 15 He perished along with Peruvian poet Manuel Scorza Uruguayan critic Angel Rama Argentinian academic Marta Traba and 177 others He is buried in Antillon Park in Guanajuato named in honor of his great grandfather General Florencio Antillon and where a talavera plaque marks his remains In translation it says simply Here lies Jorge Ibarguengoitia in the park of his great grandfather who fought against the French 16 According to his publisher Ibarguengoitia s books are still well received in libraries and bookstores 6 and his work has received renewed attention in the past years thanks to the effort of scholars and writers like Juan Villoro and Sergio Gonzalez Rodriguez 17 His personal archive is at the Firestone Library of Princeton University 18 Bibliography EditDrama Edit La lucha con el angel 1955 Clotilde en su casa also titled Un adulterio exquisito 1955 Published in Teatro mexicano del siglo XX Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 1956 Ante varias esfinges 1959 El viaje superficial 1960 Published in Revista Mexicana de Literatura June September 1960 La conspiracion vendida 1960 El atentado 1963 Los buenos manejos 1980 Obras de Jorge Ibarguengoitia Teatro I Includes Susana y los jovenes Clotilde en su casa and La lucha con el angel Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1989 Obras de Jorge Ibarguengoitia Teatro II Includes Llego Margo Ante varias esfinges El loco amor viene El tesoro perdido and Dos crimenes Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1989 Obra de Jorge Ibarguengoitia Teatro III Includes El viaje superficial Pajaro en mano Los buenos manejos La conspiracion vendida and El atentado Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1990 Novels Edit Los relampagos de agosto Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1965 English translation The Lightning of August 1986 Maten al leon Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1969 Estas ruinas que ves Mexico Novaro 1974 Las muertas Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1977 English translation The Dead Girls 2018 Dos crimenes Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1979 English translation Two Crimes 1984 Los pasos de Lopez Mexico Oceano 1982 Short story collections Edit La ley de Herodes y otros cuentos Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1967 Piezas y cuentos para ninos Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1990 El raton del supermercado y otros cuentos Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 2005 El nino Triclinio y la bella Dorotea Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 2008 Essays Edit Teatro mexicano contemporaneo Madrid Aguilar 1957 Salvese quien pueda Mexico Novaro 1975 Article collections Edit Viajes en la America Ignota Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1972 Autopsias rapidas Mexico Vuelta 1988 Instrucciones para vivir en Mexico Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1990 La casa de usted y otros viajes Mexico Joaquin Mortiz 1991 Films based on his books Edit Maten al leon 1975 directed by Jose Estrada Las Poquianchis 1976 directed by Felipe Cazals Estas ruinas que ves 1978 directed by Julian Pastor Maten al leon 1991 TV film directed by Jorge Ali Triana Dos crimenes 1993 directed by Roberto SneiderAwards EditTheatre Prize Ciudad de Mexico for La conspiracion vendida 1960 19 Theatre Prize Casa de las Americas for El atentado 1963 19 Novel Prize Casa de las Americas for Los relampagos de agosto 1964 19 International Novel Prize Mexico for Estas ruinas que ves 1975 19 See also EditEsperpento Joy LavilleReferences Edit Castaneda Jaime 1986 Jorge Ibarguengoitia Humorismo y Narrativa PDF Jorge Ibarguengoitia PlanetadeLibros in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b c d e Jorge Ibarguengoitia breve biografia Mexico Desconocido in Spanish 2021 01 22 Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b Gonzalez Enric 2014 Instrucciones para leer a Jorge Ibarguengoitia a b c d e f g h i j k l Secci M Cristina 2022 Rompecabezas vida y obra de Jorge Ibarguengoitia PDF a b c d e f g h i La vida sin Jorge Ibarguengoitia 30 aniversario luctuoso Excelsior in Spanish 2013 11 24 Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b c Castaneda Jaime 1986 Jorge Ibarguengoitia Humorismo y Narrativa PDF Jorge Ibarguengoitia Los giros de su vida www clublectores com Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b Pitol Sergio Jorge Ibarguengoitia PDF Estas ruinas que ves Detalle de la obra Enciclopedia de la Literatura en Mexico FLM CONACULTA www elem mx Retrieved 2022 10 26 Domenella Ana Rosa 2005 Jorge Ibarguengoitia y la historia de Mexico Entre la fascinacion y la farsa Signos Literarios 1 1 ISSN 1870 4050 Jorge Ibarguengoitia 1928 1983 En la antesala del centenario de su natalicio PDF Retrato de Jorge Ibarguengoitia cultura nexos com mx in Spanish Retrieved 2022 10 26 Gonzalez Enric 2007 12 22 Un sarcastico incurable El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 2022 10 26 Accidentes en Espana Archived from the original on 2008 02 23 Poca atencion para aniversario luctuoso de Jorge Ibarguengoitia PortalGuanajuato MX in Spanish 2013 11 26 Retrieved 2022 10 26 Jorge Ibarguengoitia 1928 1983 En la antesala del centenario de su natalicio PDF Jorge Ibarguengoitia Papers 1923 2008 mostly 1954 1984 Finding Aids findingaids princeton edu Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b c d Jorge Ibarguengoitia Agencia Literaria Carmen Balcells Retrieved 2022 10 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jorge Ibarguengoitia amp oldid 1154757770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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