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Luis García Montero (Granada, 4 December 1958) is a Spanish poet and literary critic, as well as a professor of Spanish Literature at the University of Granada. == Biografía == Descendent of a ''granadino'' family that was very active in the community, Luis García Montero was born in this city in 1958 as the son of Luis García López and Elisa Montero Peña, and studied at the Colegio de los Escolapios. As a teenager, he was a fan of ''equestrian'' sports and had the opportunity to meet Blas de Otero. He studied ''Philosophy and literature'' at the University of Granada, where he was a student of Juan Carlos Rodríguez Gómez, a social literature theorist. He received his Masters in 1980 and later became a doctorate in 1985 with a thesis about Rafael Alberti, ''La norma y los estilos en la poesía de Rafael Alberti'' or ''The norm and styles of Rafael Alberti's poetry''. He maintained a great friendship with Alberti, a poet of the Generation of '27, and prepared a compilation of all his works of poetry. He began to work as an associate professor at the University of Granada in 1981. He received the Premio Adonáis de Poesía in 1982 for ''El jardín extranjero''. He created a memoir of his studies in 1984 about ''El teatro medieval. Polémica de una inexistencia'' or ''Medieval theatre. Controversy of an inexistence''. He became linked to the poetic group ''La Otra Setimentalidad'' (''The Other Sentimentality''), a wave in which contemporary Spanish poetry took the name of its first joint book, published in 1983, in which poets Javier Egea and Álvaro Salvador also participated. The poetics of the group remained reflected above all in this short book and in lesser part in the his manifesto ''Manifiesto albertista'' (1982) by Luis García Montero and Javier Egea. Their personal trajectory began widening in what would later become known as ''poesía de la experiencia'' or ''poetry of the experience'' and is characterized by the general tendency to dillude the most personal ''I'' in the collective experience, furthering itself from the stylistic and thematic individuality of previous Novísimos authors; Garía and his group, however, tried to relate themselves with the previous poetic tradition taking in the postulates Luis Cernuda and Jaime Gil de Biedma and tried to unite the aesthetics of Antonio Machado with the thinking of the Generation of the '50's, as well as with Surrealism and the impactful images of Spanish Baroque poets or those of Juan Ramón Jiménez. Garía Montero's most distinguishable characteristic is the history-biographical narrativism of his poems; a structure almost theatrical or novelistic con a character or protagonist that tells or lives his story through recollection, memory or desire. His poetry is characterized by a colloquial language and by his reflections regarding every day events or situations. He's edited ''Rimas'' (''Rhymes'') by Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, among other theoretical works. He has also cultivated the art of essay writing and is an opinion columnist. Between the award-winning poetics that he's received, the most impressive have been the Premio Federico García Lorca, the Premio Loewe, the Premio Adonáis of poetry and the Premio Nacional de Poesía with which he was awarded in 1995, and the Premio Nacional de la Crítica in 2003. In 2010 he was awarded in Mexico the Premio Poetas del Mundo Latino for his literary career. Since 1994 he shares his life with writer Almudena Grandes and has three children. Since he was very young he has been an active member in the PCE and since his founding in the Izquierda Unida. In the European Parliament election, 2004 he was introduced in the list of said coalition. Facing the Spanish general elections of 2011 he manifested his support for the candidacy of Izquierda Unida.〔(Ellos 'se mojan' y 'eligen IU' ), ''El Mundo'', 11 November 2011.〕 In October 2012 it was announced that take on a key role in Izquierda Abierta, a new party led by Gaspar Llamazares and Montse Muñoz that found itself integrated with Izquierda Unida.〔http://www.publico.es/espana/444188/garcia-montero-y-berzosa-ocupan-cargos-claves-en-izquierda-abierta〕 On 22 October 2008 Luis García Montero was condemned for an injuries case in writing an article calling professor José Antonio Fortes disturbed and that in his classes at the University of Granada and in writing calling Federico García Lorca a fascist and while calling the exiled write Francisco Ayala a Nazi. () García Montero asked for unpaid leave as a lecturer of said university. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Luis García Montero」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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