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Sur (magazine)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sur
Cover of Sur, 1952
CategoriesLiterary
FormatMagazine
First issue1931
Final issue1992
CountryArgentina
Based inBuenos Aires
LanguageSpanish
Literary critic Victoria Ocampo and a copy of her journal, SUR.

Sur was a literary magazine published in Buenos Aires between 1931 and 1992.

History and profile

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Sur was first published in 1931,[1][2] with the assistance of a multidisciplinary team of collaborators. Its founder and main backer was Victoria Ocampo,[2] and it was supported intellectually by the Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset. Many of the earliest editions of Sur carry the colophon of Ortega's Revista de Occidente. Notable contributors and sometime editors included Jorge Luis Borges, H.A. Murena, José Bianco, Raimundo Lida, Adolfo Bioy Casares and Borges' Spanish brother-in-law Guillermo de Torre.[3] The last issue was published in 1992.[1][4]

References

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  1. ^ a b Maria Belén Hernández-González (2016). "The Construction of the Memory of Italy in Argentina through a Choice of Translated Essays". CALL: Irish Journal for Culture, Arts, Literature and Language. 1 (1).
  2. ^ a b John King (1981). "Towards a Reading of the Argentine Literary Magazine Sur". Latin American Research Review. 16 (2): 57–78. JSTOR 2503125.
  3. ^ Daniel Balderston; Mike Gonzalez (2004). Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Latin American and Caribbean Literature, 1900–2003. Routledge Books. p. 555. ISBN 9781134399604.
  4. ^ Camila Sutherland (2017). ""El pájaro de cuatro notas": the reception of Argentine women writers and artists' work in avant-garde magazines (1920–1930)". Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies. 23 (3): 399–416. doi:10.1080/14701847.2017.1385224. S2CID 165199438.
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