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Is it possible that more than 50 years after the assassination of Che Guevara, and after hundreds and perhaps thousands of biographers, analysts, journalists, and scientists researching the life and legacy of Che Guevara, it has not yet been discovered that one of Guevara's articles was published with a pseudonym in July 1967 in the most important journal of social sciences in Cuba, Pensamiento Crítico? The author of this book proposes an affirmative answer to this question, revealing for the first time at a worldwide level, Che Guevara's possible authorship of a brilliant article studying the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Is it possible that more than 50 years after the assassination of Che Guevara, and after hundreds and perhaps thousands of biographers, analysts, journalists, and scientists researching the life and legacy of Che Guevara, it has not yet been discovered that one of Guevara's articles was published with a pseudonym in July 1967 in the most important journal of social sciences in Cuba, Pensamiento Crítico? The author of this book proposes an affirmative answer to this question, revealing for the first time at a worldwide level, Che Guevara's possible authorship of a brilliant article studying the Bolivia situation in 1967, at the same time that Guevara's National Liberation Army of Bolivia was fighting against the military dictatorship of Rene Barrientos. The book provides a dense and rich series of arguments to prove this audacious historical conjecture. The reader must judge if these arguments are convincing or not.
Autorenporträt
Carlos Antonio Aguirre Rojas has a postdoctoral degree in history from the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris. He is a full-time researcher at the Institute for Social Research in the National Autonomous University of Mexico. He specializes in the theory of history of the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and in the new antisystemic movements in Latin America. Noah Mazer is a poet and translator based in Mexico City. His translations have appeared in Protean, Asymptote, and Paintbucket.page and he maintains a translation blog at noahmazer.com.