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Miguel de Cervantes Prize

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Novelist and poet Jose Emilio Pacheco has died at the age of 74, a day after hurting his head in a fall.

The poet’s daughter, Laura Emilia Pacheco, said he died “very peacefully” after suffering a heart attack.

In 2009, Jose Emilio Pacheco was awarded the Cervantes Prize, the highest literary honor in the Spanish-speaking world.

In 2009, Jose Emilio Pacheco was awarded the Cervantes Prize, the highest literary honor in the Spanish-speaking world

In 2009, Jose Emilio Pacheco was awarded the Cervantes Prize, the highest literary honor in the Spanish-speaking world

Jose Emilio Pacheco was born in Mexico City in 1939, and is best-known for his accounts of adolescents growing up in a corrupt and unjust Mexico in the 1940s and 1950s.

He is seen as one of Mexico’s foremost poets and a leading representative of his generation.

Jose Emilio Pacheco also translated works by Samuel Beckett, Tennessee Williams and TS Eliot, and taught literature at universities in the US, UK and Canada, besides his work in Mexico.

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Argentinean poet and political critic Juan Gelman has died aged 83 in Mexico City.

Juan Gelman, the son of Jewish immigrants to Argentina from Ukraine, is considered to be one of the greatest authors in Spanish and was awarded the prestigious Cervantes Prize in 2007.

The poet, a left-wing activist and a guerrilla in Argentina in the 1960s and 1970s, lived in Mexico for 20 years.

He wrote more than 20 books of poetry since 1956 – translated into 14 languages – and regular columns for newspapers.

Juan Gelman is considered to be one of the greatest authors in Spanish and was awarded the prestigious Cervantes Prize in 2007

Juan Gelman is considered to be one of the greatest authors in Spanish and was awarded the prestigious Cervantes Prize in 2007

Juan Gelman’s son and his pregnant daughter-in-law died after being abducted by the military government in the 1970s.

Official accounts say almost 20,000 people disappeared at the hands of the regime in between 1976 to 1983, but human rights groups say the figure is at least 30,000.

In 1990 Juan Gelman was able to identify his son’s remains, discovering that he had been executed and buried in a barrel filled with sand and cement.

The poet was never able to find the remains of his daughter-in-law Maria Claudia.

But in 2000, Juan Gelman was also able to trace his granddaughter, born before Maria Claudia’s presumed murder. The child had been handed over to a pro-government family in Uruguay.

The reunion was one of the most high profile involving disappeared people in Argentina’s history – fewer than 600 victims of the 1976-83 “dirty war” have been found.

Juan Gelman’s work celebrates life but is also tempered with social and political commentary, reflecting his own painful experiences with the politics of his country.

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