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The Revolution: A Goddess, a Muse, a Fate


Article # : 15614 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 2 / 1989  3,223 Words
Author : Pablo Antonio Cuadra
Pablo Antonio Cuadra, a Nicaraguan poet, dramatist, and essayist, is the editor of La Prensa and of the reviews La Prensa Leteraria and El Pez y la Serpiente. He is the author of fifteen books, among which the following are available in English: The Jaguar and the Moon (trans, Thomas Merton), Songs of Cifar and the Sweet Sea (trans. Grace Schulman and Ana McCarthy Zavala), and The Birth of the Sun (trans. Stephen White). Cuadra is also a visiting professor at the University of Texas.

       MUSAS EN GUERRA
       Edited by Jose M. Oviedo
       Mexico City: Joaquin Mortiz
       202 pp.
       
        The book Musas en Guerra (Muses at war) was announced in 1982, a year after the terms of the revolutionary equation in Nicaragua had been reversed--by the time the book actually appeared in 1987, the war was against the muses themselves. The announcement of Musas en Guerra marked the high point in Nicaraguan national literary hopes; a moment later the decline of the revolution began, and with it, a profound disillusionment. The book even contains a document ("The Intellectuals in the Revolutionary Future," by Sergio Ramirez) that should have opened the eyes of its editor, Jose Miguel Oviedo, who remained optimistic about the revolution as late as 1982. But perhaps one should not be too harsh on Oviedo; the Nicaraguan revolution kindled far too many such hopes.
       
        What actually happened at that crucial, decisive moment of reversal? I recall that at just about that time I had been invited to a symposium sponsored by Simon Bolivar University in Caracas, Venezuela, where I read a paper on the history of Nicaraguan literature. I closed with the following paragraph: "The revolution was written and fought at the same time, by those who argued about poetry to the death, or sang to the future in terms of purifying sacrifice, which is the pinnacle of great visions. But literature is unpredictable. A new era has opened its doors to us. We stand before it now." That was in 1980.
       
        It turns out that I was wrong about the direction in which the door was moving. The revolution never opened a new period in Nicaraguan history; it merely closed the previous one.
       
        Questions after the fact
       
        Since Musas en guerra was published as recently as 1987, its author had plenty of time--two years--to add to his prologue a postscript dated 1985, in which, to his credit, he admits that "many things have happened these last three years: internal and external forces have drastically altered the situation in Nicaragua and its historical and continental significance." And, he notes, Nicaragua's "tendency towards radicalization has increased. Censorship exists in Nicaragua, and is used to systematically silence La Prensa. In 1986 the paper was permanently closed." (Oviedo does not say that on that date all independent sources of information and
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