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In 2002, Carlos Monsiváis, the Mexican journalist and political activist wrote an essay entitled, Yo te bendigo, vida, which was about Amado Nervo. [5] In 2006, musical artist Rodrigo de la Cadena presented "Poema: Por Cobardia", which was a poem by Nervo's set to music.
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Amado nervo: Image title: Ediciones Selectas América. Cuadernos Quincenales de Letras y Ciencias. Año II, nro. 22; File change date and time: 14:01, 30 July 2021:
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1917 Los sueños son vida Ricardo Jaimes Freyre (Bolivia) 1919 Irremediablemente Alfonsina Storni (Argentina) 1919 Los frutos ácidos Alfonso Hernández Catá (Cuba) 1919 Raza de bronce Alcides Arguedas (Bolivia) 1922 La amada inmóvil Amado Nervo (Mexico) 1922 Trilce César Vallejo (Peru) 1922 Paulicéia desvairada Mário de Andrade (Brazil)
Notable modernists of the time included Amado Nervo and Manuel Gutiérrez Nájera. Other notable authors of that time were Luis G. Urbina, Efren Rebolledo, José Juan Tablada, Enrique González Martínez and Ramón López Velarde. The emergence of the Mexican Revolution favored the development of journalistic genre.
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All of these events affected Zoila Aurora Cáceres, who was educated by nuns in Germany and at the Sorbone in Paris. She was known to many of the major modernista authors including Amado Nervo, Rubén Darío and Enrique Gómez Carrillo, whom she married. Besides her interesting life, she left behind political tracks and a wide gamut of writing.