El Señor Presidente is a 1946 novel written in Spanish by Nobel Prize-winning Guatemalan writer and diplomat Miguel Ángel Asturias. The novel’s title character was inspired by the 1898–1920 presidency of Manuel Estrada Cabrera. Asturio received the Nobel Prize in Literature for his entire body of work in 1967.
About El Señor Presidente in brief

I saw something like an immense cloud conceal the enormous moon. It was then that I wrote my first poem, a song of farewell to Guatemala. Later, I was angered by the circumstances during which the rubble was cleared away and by the social injustice that became so bloodily apparent. The novel is one of the most notable works of the dictator novel genre, and is a landmark text in Latin American literature. It was written to protest social injustice in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake in the author’s home town. The author’s use of dream imagery, onomatopoeia, simile, and repetition of particular phrases, combined with a discontinuous structure, springs from surrealist and ultraist influences. It is a classic example of magic realism, a literary technique now known as ‘magical realism’ and ‘the magic realism of the 20th century’ The novel’s themes include the inability to tell reality apart from dreams, the power of the written word in the hands of authorities, and thealienation produced by the dictatorship. In the novel, the President opts to defend himself against criminal charges rather than go into exile, however, he had the opportunity to base his observations on his own fictional leader—the disgraced leader, Gregory Rabassa—on the base of his own observations of the popular disturbances.
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This page is based on the article El Señor Presidente published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 01, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






