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Homero aridjis biography of albert

          He is the recipient of a Mexican Writers' Center Fellowship, a French government fellowship, and two Guggenheim Fellowships.

        1. He is the recipient of a Mexican Writers' Center Fellowship, a French government fellowship, and two Guggenheim Fellowships.
        2. Vancouver-based Irish-Canadian poet, translator, editor, and teacher George McWhirter has won the Griffin Poetry Prize for his English.
        3. In Homero Aridjis's two novels tracing the adventures of Juan Cabezón, the protagonist's ambivalent identity is evident in his Jewish self-hatred in the Old.
        4. Homero Aridjis was born in Contepec, Michoacán, Mexico.
        5. Home ro Aridjis.
        6. In Homero Aridjis's two novels tracing the adventures of Juan Cabezón, the protagonist's ambivalent identity is evident in his Jewish self-hatred in the Old..

          Aridjis, Homero (1940–)

          Homero Aridjis (b. 6 April 1940), Mexican writer.

          Like many of his contemporaries in Mexico, Aridjis has had a varied career, including journalism, diplomatic service, and teaching. Trained as a journalist, he was a member of a writing workshop directed by the noted Mexican short-story writer Juan José Arreola and was awarded fellowships by the Centro Mexicano de Escritores (Mexican Writers Center) and the Guggenheim Foundation.

          Aridjis has written poetry and prose, much of it first published in Mexican literary journals and Sunday cultural supplements of newspapers and subsequently appearing in numerous collected works.

          "Homero is many poets in one," McWhirter said earlier in the night.

          His many volumes of poetry, among them Antes del reino (1963) and Vivar para ver (1977), focus on themes of love, life, and death, and are heavily charged with emotion. More recently he has attempted to create the "poema nuclear" (nuclear poem), modifying his use of language and including social and historical themes.

          As a prose writ