Sneha Girap (Editor)

Guillermo Sheridan

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Language
  
Spanish

Role
  
Literary critic

Name
  
Guillermo Sheridan

Subject
  
Modern Mexican poetry

Nationality
  
Mexican


Guillermo Sheridan El Universal Cultura Guillermo Sheridan nuevo

Born
  
Guillermo Humberto Sheridan Prieto 27 August 1950 (age 73) Mexico City (
1950-08-27
)

Alma mater
  
National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) University of East Anglia

Notable awards
  
Xavier Villaurrutia Award (1989), Fernando Benitez for Cultural Journalism (2011).

Movies
  
Cabeza de Vaca, Guardianes de la fe

Education
  
National Autonomous University of Mexico, University of East Anglia

Similar People
  
Octavio Paz, Ramon Lopez Velarde, Jose Gorostiza, Nicolas Echevarria, Roberto Sosa

Entrevista con guillermo sheridan sobre su libro habitaci n con retratos


Guillermo Humberto Sheridan Prieto (born 27 August 1950 in Mexico City) is a Mexican literary critic, scholar and public commentator.

Contents

Life and work

Sheridan was a Chevening Scholar at the University of East Anglia in1986. He was awarded a doctorate in Mexican literature by the National Autonomous University of Mexico. He is a member of Mexico's Sistema Nacional de Investigadores, a governmental agency established in Mexico in 1984, to promote both the quantity and quality of research.

As a scholar, most of his writing deals with the history of Mexican modern poetry in books like Los Contemporáneos ayer (1985), Un corazón adicto (1990, a biography of Ramón López Velarde), México en 1932 (1999, a study of Mexican nationalism), Poeta con Paisaje (2004, a biography of Nobel laureate poet Octavio Paz), Tres ensayos sobre Gilberto Owen (2008, essays about a Mexican poet), Paralelos y meridianos (2010, literary essays), Señales debidas (2011, essays about Mexican writers and poets of the 20th century) and Malas palabras. Jorge Cuesta y la revista Examen (2011, a history of modern literary censorship in Mexico). His latest book, Habitación con retratos (2015) is the second volume of a thrilogy about Octavio Paz's life and work. Sheridan has also edited works by poets like José Juan Tablada, Ramón López Velarde and José Gorostiza.

Sheridan has written extensively about politics, education and everyday life in some of Mexico’s most prestigious newspapers, such as Reforma and La Jornada. He was a monthly collaborator to Octavio Paz’s review Vuelta, and continues to publish a monthly article in Enrique Krauze’s Letras Libres and a weekly commentary in El Universal, a major daily newspaper. Several volumes of his chronicles have been published over the years: Frontera norte (1988), Cartas de Copilco y otras postales (1993), Lugar a dudas (1999), El encarguito (2007) and Viaje al centro de mi tierra (2011). His writings about the problems of higher education in Mexico were collected in Allá en el campus grande (2001). In 1996 he published an infamous satyrical novel about Mexican politics, El dedo de oro (Alfaguara, 1996). He has a blog called "El Minutario", hosted by Letras Libres.

Sheridan has also written about Mexican art. The book Manuel Alvarez Bravo: Eyes in His Eyes, a collection of inedit photographs, published by D.A.P. in 2007, has a text written by Sheridan.

He has been a longtime collaborator of film director Nicolás Echevarría, with whom he wrote the script for Cabeza de Vaca (film) (1990) and several documentaries about Mexican indigenous cultures.

A full-time professor and researcher at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Sheridan has been a visiting scholar at the University of Aberdeen, in Scotland; at the Sorbonne Nouvelle in France; at Boston University and at the University of Texas in Austin.

In 1989 he was awarded the Xavier Villaurrutia Award, a literary national prize.

In 2011 he received the "Fernando Benítez Cultural Journalism" national award by the Guadalajara International Book Fair.

In 2014 he received the "Ramón López Velarde Prize", a national literary award.

References

Guillermo Sheridan Wikipedia