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portada MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish)
MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish)MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish)
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Category
Fiction
Year
2025
Language
Spanish
Pages
512
Format
Paperback
ISBN13
9786287824270
Edited in
Colombia

MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish)

Mijail Bulgakov (Author) · Debolsillo · Paperback

MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish) - Mijail Bulgakov

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New Book Imported to Taiwan
Delivery: 31 Jul - 18 Aug Shipping: 13 to 20 business days.
NT$ 1,045
NT$ 1,045

Synopsis "MAESTRO Y MARGARITA, EL (in Spanish)"

«Una de las grandes novelas del siglo. Un texto libérrimo, que escapa por todas sus costuras, una rebelión de la imaginación frente al corsé estalinista, un desafío». Marcos Ordóñez, Babelia Moscú, 1930. Sobre la ciudad desciende Satán bajo la forma de un profesor de ciencias ocultas. A partir de entonces, se suceden fenómenos prodigiosos que trastornan la vida de los moscovitas. Entre los afectados está Margarita, a la que Satán ofrece, a cambio de su compañía en una fiesta, la liberación de su amante, el Maestro, que se encuentra en un psiquiátrico después de la mala acogida de su obra sobre Poncio Pilato (que esconde a la figura de Stalin) y Yehosua. Por su gran aliento poético e intención crítica es sin duda una de las obras maestras de la literatura del siglo XX.
Mijail Bulgakov
  (Author)
View Author's Page
Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov was born in Kiev in 1891. In 1909, he entered the Faculty of Medicine and from 1916 worked as a doctor in a village in the Smolensk province; he then moved to the city of Vyazma. The impressions of those years served as the basis for the cycle of stories A Young Doctor's Notebook (1925-1926). After the October Revolution of 1917, Bulgakov returned to Kiev. During the Civil War, he lived for a time in Vladikavkaz and in 1921 moved to Moscow, where the action of The Fatal Eggs (1925) and Heart of a Dog (1925, published in 1968 in Great Britain) takes place. In 1925, he published in the magazine Russia and the novel The White Guard. That same year, he began working on a play linked in argument and theme to the latter, which would later be named The Days of the Turbins (1926). The creation process of this play is described in Notes of a Dead Man, published posthumously as Black Snow (1965). Later, he wrote two satirical works about Soviet life in the twenties, Zoya's Apartment (1926) and The Purple Island (1927), as well as a drama about the Civil War and the first Russian emigration, Flight (1928, banned shortly after its premiere).

In the late 1920s, Bulgakov was subjected to harsh attacks by the official critics. His prose works were not published, and his plays were removed from the theater repertoire. In March 1930, he sent a letter to Stalin and the Soviet government requesting the possibility to emigrate from the Soviet Union or, alternatively, to make a living in the theater. A month later, Stalin called Bulgakov and allowed him to work, after which the writer received the position of assistant director at the Moscow Art Theatre.

Bulgakov died in Moscow on March 10, 1940.
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