Eloy Fariña Núñez
(Asunción, 1885-1929) Paraguayan poet, essayist and narrator, author of the monumental Canto secular .This work has been defined as "a kind of Lusiadas Paraguayan", not only because it is one of the most extensive native poems, but also because in it the author managed to enhance the merits of a culture that had suffered the attacks of the war of 1870, and that at the end of the war he was in a difficult reestablishment of his expressive forms.According to the critic and historian Efraím Cardozo, it is the "maximum creation of Paraguayan lyric, which has placed its author among the great Spanish-speaking poets."
Fariña Núñez lived in Buenos Aires during his early youth, and managed to establish links with several renowned writers from this country, among which his friendship with Leopoldo Lugones stands out.Despite his age, he has been considered a protagonist of the so-called generation of the Nineteenth century, the great cultural revitalization movement that managed to lift Paraguayan society from the postwar morass.A cultured man, his reading shows a taste for the Greco-Latin classics and for philosophers like Schopenhauer, with a certain attraction to mystical and orientalist themes, influences that can be detected in some of his stories.
His most outstanding works include, in poetry, in addition to the aforementioned Canto Secular (1911), the collection of poems Carmenes (1922); the edition of his complete poems was completed posthumously, in 1996.His narrative work includes the novel Rhodopia (1912), which remains unpublished; the book of stories The vertebrae of Pan (1914); and an interpretive collection of Guaraní Myths (1926).In 1912 he won the first award in the literary contest of the Buenos Aires newspaper La Prensa for his short story "Bucles de Oro".
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