Los De Abajo Mariano Azuela Pelicula Descargar

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Preview — Los De Abajo by Mariano Azuela

First published as a serial in the newspaper El Paso del Norte, in October and November of 1915, then as a book published by the same newspaper, the novel Los de abajo has been translated into all the main languages of the world. Mariano Azuela's masterwork came out one hundred years after Jose Loaquin Fernandez de Lazardi's El Periquillo Sarniento created the genre of the...more
Published March 1st 2007 by Stockcero (first published 1916)
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Jun 11, 2019Jim Fonseca rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The author (1873-1952) knows first-hand what he writes about because he joined as a doctor an army that was part of Pancho Villa’s forces in the Mexican Revolution of 1910-14. What he saw and later wrote about soured him on the Revolution. He came to believe that the social justice being promoted by the revolt was equalized by the evils occurring.
The general who is the main character says “If a man has a rifle in his hands and a beltful of cartridges, surely he should use them. That means fight
...more
Sep 09, 2018Tara rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Wow. And I thought Blood Meridian was bleak...
Mar 02, 2017Edward rated it really liked it · Pdfreview of another edition
Shelves: fiction, central-and-south-america, translated, own, 4-star
Foreword, by Carlos Fuentes
Introduction, by Sergio Waisman
Suggestions for Further Reading
Chronology of the Mexican Revolution
Chronology of Mariano Azuela's Life and Work

--The Underdogs: A Novel of the Mexican Revolution
Notes
Apr 09, 2010Mochizuki rated it really liked it · review of another edition
First of all, this is NOT a history book. If you're interested in learning about the Mexican Revolution pick up a history book.
Second of all, you didn't get the point. It's not about the life of rural Mexico, or how people lived, or how they lost their ideals. It's about joining 'la bola' the mass of people fighting for no particular reason. The 'campesinos' didn't really join the fight because they believed they were getting land and freedom, they joined because they believed in their leaders,
...more

Los De Abajo Mariano Azuela

Dec 18, 2015Jonathan rated it really liked it · review of another edition
An important book this, and one that has been poorly translated in the past, so I advise you not to read the free versions out there.
As always with Norton, there are some great essays and other contextual docs here which provide much needed background and additional detail for those of us not too familiar with the Mexican Revolution.
The novel (or, really, novella) is well written and punchy - comparisons to the short sentences of Hemingway are not misplaced.
Dec 31, 2015Nathan 'N.R.' Gaddis added it · review of another edition
Shelves: portospanish-latinamerican, historical-fiction, 2016-gelesen
We’ve been there so many times and we are where we are today because we all smugly know that all of our Rising Up will be followed up immediately with a Rising Down. It’s too complicated too complex too ambiguous. Unless someone makes it clear to us but then we assure ourselves it can’t be so simple -- Change a light bulb! Stop eating meat! Save the planet! Or, down with racism! Down with sexism! Down with ablism! Down with whatever anti-LGBTQ is called! Social Justice Now!!!
But you turn out loo
...more
Los De Abajo Mariano Azuela Pelicula Descargar
May 07, 2018Daniel Polansky added it · review of another edition
While serving as a doctor in the Northern Division Azeuala somehow found the time to dash off this formally complex but brutally raw novel about the Mexican revolution, from its early, idealistic period to its moral and military collapse. This is fabulous, beginning as a scathingly subtle satire of heroic military literature before taking an abrupt nihilistic turn, some fascinating amalgam of The Forty Days of Musa Dagh and Heart of Darkness. And to recap, he wrote all of this literally while it...more
Mar 04, 2014Mike rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Next year marks the centennial of the publication of Mariano Azuela's 'The Underdogs,' often said to be 'the greatest novel' of the Mexican Revolution of 20 November 1910. It may be, though it isn't a sweeping and detailed account of that fierce but doomed uprising. Rather, it's a slim book of brief segments that look at the revolution in intimate terms by focusing on the innocence, confusion, courage and eventual disillusionment of Demetrio Macias, an illiterate Indian who like other disenfranc...more
Jan 25, 2017Hilda rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I really enjoyed it, this book is a very interesting and honest about the mexican revolution, even when this isn't an historical book about the mexican revolution war. The characters are honest and with realistic features, you'll find the honest leader who believed that only revolution will bring justice to the people and commands a small force of rebels, the poor who don't have anything to lose and obviously the rascal opportunist who take advantage of the war.
My main complaint is that this bo
...more
Dec 22, 2009Shane Westfall rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I loved reading this one! Several of the criticisms mentioned in other reviews are valid, yet where I felt Azuela excelled was in illustrating the 'gray'. No saintly protagonists nor sinister bad guys to be found...simply a portrait of real humans embroiled in a conflict where perhaps the only moral difference between the two parties depends on whom one is cheering for. Sure, Cervantes' ride off into the mercantile business seemed a bit of a stretch, but then no more so than Shakespeare relying...more

Los De Abajo Pdf

Jul 22, 2015Alex Lopez-barton rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Gives an excellent overview of the Mexican Revolution 1910 which is amazing as he wrote it from his experiences.
Jan 22, 2019Abby Hinrichs rated it liked it · review of another edition
In Mariano Azuela's novel, Los de abajo, Demetrio Marcías, an Indian farmer is roped into joining the Revolution and leaving his wife and child behind. Along the way, he meets other people who join him in his fight against the Federals and eventually help him to earn the title as one of Villa's generals. This book discusses the discrepancies that lie between the rich and the poor, the educated and the illiterate, men and women, and the Revolutionaries and the Federals (Mexican government). Chara...more
Jul 10, 2019Wendy rated it it was ok · review of another edition
'Revolutions begin fighting tyranny and end fighting themselves.'-Saint-Just
With a Foreword by the incomparable Carlos Fuentes, I was looking forward to reading this novel written in the midst of the Mexican Revolution by Mariano Azuela. Unfortunately, I found it difficult to connect to the narrative and this halting, flawed prose. I think that is most likely due to the clunky and jarring translation by Sergio Waisman and I should probably read this groundbreaking novel in its original Spanish s
...more
Jan 22, 2019Bryn McCarthy rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Before reading “Los de abajo,” by Mariano Azuela, I thought it would be a historical synopsis of the Mexican Revolution, but once I began reading I quickly learned that it actually tells the story of one individuals life throughout the revolution, the life of Demetrio Macías. Demetrio begins as an Indian uninvolved in the revolution, a husband wanting to protect his wife and his land, and transforms throughout the book into one of Pancho Villa’s top generals. Furthermore, this book appeals to re...more
Sep 04, 2017Matt rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: literature, school, historical-fiction, 2017-reads
Anyone who has learned anything about the Mexican Revolution knows that it was a complicated era in that nation’s history that just seemed to continue without end. The Underdogs was the first novel about the conflict even as it continued to grind on and written by a former participant Mariano Azuela.
The majority of the narrative follows Demetrio Macias, who finds himself on the bad side of the local chief and is burned out of his home before feeling to the mountains. Gathering his friends, Macia
...more
Jan 22, 2019Edwin Castellanos rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Prof. Barnett / Washington and Lee University
Los de Abajo written by Mariano Azuela was a great novel that drew me into the world of the Mexican Revolution of 1910. I was definitely able to understand more with some knowledge of the key events and people that played a role before and during the Mexican Revolution. I don't think that a reader without some understanding of Mexico would be able to navigate the world of the main character Demetrio Macías without missing key details. The language and
...more
Nov 26, 2017Michael Haase rated it liked it · review of another edition
It's hard to stomach a novel filled with so much violence and brutality. Los de abajo is like a shorter and more mild version of Blood Meridian, but all the same, it gets to a such a point that I imagine only sadists could derive any enjoyment from their reading. It may be said that, as a work of historical fiction, the quality of the book comes from its educational value and less from the pleasure of reading it.
This is a novel that preserves the atmosphere of hostility and chaos that pervaded
...more
Jan 23, 2019Clara McCollam rated it liked it · review of another edition
Los de abajo Los de abajo is a novel by Mariano Azuela set during the Mexican Revolution. Although I don’t normally reach for novels set during military revolutionary times, this novel was more interesting than others in the sense that it has a complex web of characters that are all well developed and are constantly adding something to the story line. I think Azuela uses these characters very strategically to paint a full picture of the large gap between the rich and poor so the reader can bett...more
Jan 22, 2019McKinley Hamilton rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Professor Barnett /Washington and Lee University: Los de abajo served as the first novel that I have read regarding the Mexican Revolution and I believe that it detailed a raw and insightful account of the tragedy and passion associated with this revolution. This novel allowed me to further understand the complexity of this ongoing event and demonstrated how the motivations of revolutionary leaders and fighters were multifaceted and occasionally ambiguous. The character development of Demetrio i...more
Jan 22, 2019Carissa Margraf rated it really liked it · review of another edition
(Carissa Margraf for Professor Barnett, Washington and Lee University) If my memory is correct, Los de Abajo was actually the first novel that I have read in Spanish in its entirety, so that presented its own challenges, but it was an extremely engaging story to keep track of. I was not sure what to expect from it, but it was so interesting to watch the progression of Demetrio's involvement with the rebels and his promotions to higher ranks, yet his lack of clarity on what exactly kept him fight...more
Jan 23, 2019Miller Townes rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Professor Barnett / Miller Townes / Washington and Lee University
I really enjoyed reading Los de abajo by Mariano Azuela. As someone who's first language is English, not Spanish, I felt that a lot of the vocabulary was very colloquial and found myself looking up many words in the dictionary. This made if fairly difficult to read but I still enjoyed the content. I liked the vivid descriptions of the scenery and felt that they made an impact on the interpretation of the events occurring in the bo
...more
Jan 23, 2019Jay Smith rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Los de Abajo, by Mariono Azuela, is a very powerful book that delivers insight into the process and ideologies of the Mexican Revolution. The book is filled with enlightening moments that reveal the often-violent acts of the Huerta government towards the rebels, known as the Underdogs. Personally, I truly enjoyed the marvelous novel due to the Robinhood element of the story, involving the resistance of the rag-tag army of Demetrio Macías, who is the main character. My favorite element of the boo...more

Los De Abajo Book

Jan 22, 2019Alexa Caffio rated it liked it · review of another edition
(Prof. Barnett / Washington and Lee University Winter 2019)
Los de abajo by Mariano Azuela seems like a true primary source document from the Mexican revolution, despite the fictional characters and storyline. Each character is chosen deliberately to represent a different group or illustrate a possible outcome of a life during the revolution. While the language presents certain challenges due to an abundance of hundred-year-old colloquialisms, the spirit of the story shines through the action. In
...more
Jan 23, 2019Eduardo rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Professor Barnett/ Eduardo Corona/ Washington And Lee
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Los De Abajo by Mariano Azuela for several reasons. One of my favorite aspects of the book was the character development. Throughout the short book, Azuela did a fantastic job of developing both primary and secondary characters in a way that they relate to certain themes of the Mexican Revolution and Mexico in the early 1900s. Another aspect that I enjoyed was how Azuela gives an important viewpoint of the Mexican
...more
Dec 12, 2017Sheri Fresonke Harper rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
The style was unusual, the story engrossing. The tale set during the Mexican Civil war of 1910 was brutal. The characters are well portrayed. I found the end really impressive; it made me glad to not be there and the actions taken seemed understandable, but not very effective for achieving the goals, with most confused about what they wanted.
Sep 28, 2018Melissa rated it liked it · review of another edition
An interesting read about how and why some joined the revolution, and how they in the end became that which they wished to overcome... but it was choppy for me, I’m not sure if it was the writing or the translation, but I didn’t feel as invested in these characters as I should have.
Feb 23, 2017Tyler rated it really liked it · review of another edition
This is a funky and wonderful historical novel. At first, I thought the translation was just weird and off, but then, reading over the Spanish original, it's really just how Azuela writes. He's a real stylist, and I can see why this is the lasting work of the revolution period. It doesn't just reflect the history of the time, but the language is alive, it's sticky and it bubbles up here and there throughout the text with the baroque, romantic, and impulse to over-describe.
Here are three snippets
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May 02, 2013Carmen Amato rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

Los De Abajo Mariano Azuela Pelicula Descargar Gratis

A couple of years ago I walked through a display of Mexican Revolution photographs in a museum in Rome, Italy. Meant primarily to showcase the era's photographers, the photographs were a sepia-toned illustration of the brutality and confusion of the times. All of the images we association with early 20th century Mexico were there--horsemen with crossed bandoliers and wide palm sombreros, women in white dresses with ruffled bodices, ragged laborers in white cotton rags, soldiers in short jackets...more
May 24, 2014Laura Jean rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

The Underdogs really reminded me of Blood Meridian by Cormack McCarthy. I think that there are several reasons for that. First, the story is very violent, but the violence is part of the environment. It is not gratuitous. The violence is simply as much a part of the environment as the blood red sunsets and the Sierra.
Another aspect of this book that reminds me of McCarthy's western novels is the terseness of the dialog. These characters are actually more talkative than the ones in McCarthy's wo
...more
May 11, 2010Joselito Honestly and Brilliantly rated it liked it · review of another edition

Mariano Azuela Biography

A novel of the Mexican revolution of 1910.
As in most revolutions, this was supposed to have been staged in order to topple a dictatorship and to gain freedom from tyranny. The book, however, illustrates that not all of those who take part in a revolution know what they are revolting for. Some 'freedom fighters' take to the hills with their own personal agenda, some of them even fugitives from the law themselves.
Survivors of the revolution, assuming they emerge therefrom victorious, would metamor
...more
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Mariano Azuela González was a Mexican author and physician, best known for his fictional stories of the Mexican Revolution of 1910. He wrote novels, works for theatre and literary criticism.
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“La revolución beneficia al pobre, al ignorante, al que toda su vida ha sido esclavo, a los infelices que ni siquiera saben que si lo son es porque el rico convierte en oro las lágrimas, el sudor y la sangre de los pobres. || The revolution benefits the poor, the ignorant, who all his life has been a slave, the unfortunate who do not know if they are is because the rich becomes the tears, sweat and blood of the poor in gold.” — 10 likes
“La revolución es el huracán, y el hombre que se entrega a ella no es ya el hombre, es la miserable hoja seca arrebatada por el vendaval…” — 4 likes
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