few years ago, the supplement raised blister Labyrinth and created a more or less Byzantine discussion on the current generation of Mexican narrators and called it, affectionately, "the invisible generation." Much of the rage and rigor with which the supplement was reviled earned it getting to go to some writers who work in the supplement or who are friends of the editors, but many of us think that there are many writers who are on track to be released and, ergo, that generation will cease to be invisible when they are neither more.
But there is another thing, the issues that handle more or less young writers is sparse and therefore can not fully identify with the ease that demand publishers. But I think I found a property I already identifiicable, yes, the anchor who wrote this little note in a blog lost in the vastness of the internets did. It will
several books and stories I read where the protagonist, hero or antihero, rebel against a society that punishes the talent and expertise and rewards the trap. Diablo guardian Xavier Velasco is an example, another would seeker heads of Antonio Ortuño, Replicant magazine read a similar story ...
Could those identifiers of the new Mexican narrative: rebellion and lack of cooperation or even malicious cooperation applied to face an elite comprised of functionally illiterate, elite whose sole merits are to be elite to be a friend of the boss ... or just be Chief?- IE6 to old, spoiled milk
- Rape by ultrasound?
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