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Jorge Majfud

    Jorge Antonio Majfud is a Uruguayan author whose literary works often explore the intricate relationships between culture, identity, and displacement. His writing is characterized by deep psychological insight and a keen observation of the human experience, particularly within the context of migration and exile. Majfud masterfully weaves narrative threads to uncover universal truths about the search for meaning and belonging in a fractured world. His literary voice is subtle yet powerful, resonating with those who appreciate a thoughtful examination of the human condition.

    Críticas de la razón pura
    The Autumn of the West
    Tequila
    Borders of The Wild Frontier: US American mythology on Latin America
    • 2021

      Since the Monroe Doctrine in 1823, at least one-third of what is currently the United States and what is known as Latin America have been shaped initially by U.S. pro-slavery expansionist policies and later by big American corporations, which promoted thousands of inventions and bloody dictatorships in the name of freedom and democracy over the last 200 years. Americans and Hispanics in the U.S. have tended to accept this convenient “freedom and democracy” narrative over the facts. It is time to start saying the inconvenient truth rather than waiting for another two centuries.

      Borders of The Wild Frontier: US American mythology on Latin America
    • 2021

      Tequila

      • 450 pages
      • 16 hours of reading
      Tequila
    • 2019

      The Autumn of the West

      • 410 pages
      • 15 hours of reading

      Jorge Majfud reflects once again on the economic, political, and cultural realities of the first two decades of the century 21st with “an outsider’s view from the center”: the culture of masks of the United States' cultural industries and national unconscious, the hyper-fragmentation of the contemporary individual, the construction of reality through social narratives, the narrative dictated by the major social powers of money and the social castes who have taken us steadily toward a new form of feudalism, one no longer based on ownership of the land but of finance capital. In all of the essays that comprise this book, one can see the urgency of responding to the historical moment, to the specific events that have occurred over the past two decades, but with an unflinching effort to contextualize events within their greater historical framework. Because, as the author asserts, forgetting is one of the principal weapons of moral, social, and, ultimately, military violence.

      The Autumn of the West