Ernesto Herrera (playwright)
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Ernesto Herrera (1889–1917) was a Uruguayan playwright, short story writer and journalist.
Background
[edit]Herrera was a dyed in the wool anarchist and a prolific writer of short stories and plays, featuring large on the Uruguayan literary scene from his late teens until his premature death at the age of twenty-seven. His first publication, Su Majestad el Hambre: Cuentos Brutales, was a collection short stories linked around the central themes of poverty and hunger, laying bare the author’s anger at the injustice and brutality he witnessed in contemporary Uruguayan society, and depicting a world in which desperation and violence go hand in hand.[1] His most famous work for the stage was El león ciego (The Blind Lion), published in 1911.[citation needed]
He travelled to Europe on several occasions, mainly visiting Spain, Portugal and France.[citation needed]
Principal works
[edit]Short stories
[edit]- Su majestad el hambre (cuentos brutales) (1910)
Plays
[edit]- El estanque (1910)
- Mala laya (1911)
- El león ciego (1911)
- La moral de Misia Paca (1911)
- El pan nuestro (1914)
- El caballo del comisario (1915)
- El Moulin Rouge (1915)
- La bella Pinguito (1916)
- La princesita Cenicienta (unfinished)
Death and legacy
[edit]His early death in 1917 when he had not yet attained the age of 30 left his reputation as an accomplished playwright with a sense of unfulfilled potential.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Brutal Tales by Ernesto Herrera, translated by Kathryn Phillips-Miles & Simon Deefholts, "The Clapton Press". 2022. ISBN 978-1-913693-12-1