Editore: University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas, 1959
EUR 17,62
Convertire valutaQuantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloWraps. Condizione: Good. Tears at both ends of the spine. Spine itself is creased. Covers are rubbed with a crease to the lower front corner. This issue devoted to the literature, poetry, and art of Mexico. Includes an unnumbered supplement titled "The Muse in Mexico: A Mid-Century Miscellany," edited by Thomas Mabry Cranfill. A virtual anthology of contemporary verse, fiction, and drawings. Contributors to this issue include Octavio Paz, Carlos Pellicer, Jose Portilla, and Joe B. Frantz, among many others.
Editore: Universit of Texas Press, (Austin), 1959
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
EUR 66,07
Convertire valutaQuantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoftcover. Condizione: Very Good. Volume II, Number 1. This issue edited by Thomas M. Cranfill. Small quarto. 202, 117, [57 illustrations] pp. Printed wrappers with modest rubbing and wear, spine with some vertical creasing and tiny nicks at the base neatly strengthened, very good and sound. A large and interesting issue, featuring a portion from *The Labyrinth of Solitude* by Octavio Paz; "Mexicanism: The Theory and the Reality," by Ramón Xirau; "Mexico's Position in Latin America," by Antonio Castro Leal; "The Physiognomy of the *Apretado*," by José Portilla; "The Mexican Idea of Death," by Emilio Uranga; An Interview with José Vasconcelos by Samuel Kaplan; "A Memoir of Alfonso Reyes," by Walter Starkie; "Tomorrow in Ancient Mesoamerica," by John Paddock; "Agrarian Reform and Economic Development," by Edmundo Flores; "Half a Century of Education in Mexico," by Francsico Larroyo; "The Provincial University in Mexicoa Personal View," by Joe B. Frantz; "Art Today in Mexico," by José Miguel García Ascot, and "Riches and Severity: An Episode in Mexican Architecture," Henry W. Wells, among others. "The Muse in Mexico: a Mid-Century Miscellany," edited by Thomas M. Cranfill, features 16 portraits of Mexican artists by Hans Beacham, 117 pages of Mexican poetry and prose, and over 50 pages of black and white reproductions of Mexican art.