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''The Fox From Up Above and the Fox From Down Below'' ( es, El zorro de arriba y el zorro de abajo) is the sixth and final novel by
Peruvian Peruvians ( es, peruanos) are the citizens of Peru. There were Andean and coastal ancient civilizations like Caral, which inhabited what is now Peruvian territory for several millennia before the Spanish conquest of Peru, Spanish conquest in th ...
writer
José María Arguedas José María Arguedas Altamirano (18 January 1911 – 2 December 1969) was a Peruvian novelist, poet, and anthropologist. Arguedas was an author of Spanish descent, fluent in the Native Quechua language, gained by living in two Quechua househ ...
published posthumously in 1971. It is an unfinished novel, interspersed with some personal and intimate diaries where the author relates the torments overwhelming him while writing the novel, finally announcing his impending suicide. Complementing the work are two letters and an epilogue. The novel depicts the consequences of accelerated modernization of the port of
Chimbote Chimbote ; qu, Chimputi) is the largest city in the Ancash Region of Peru, and the capital of both Santa Province and Chimbote District. The city is located on the coast in Ferrol Bay, 130 km south of Trujillo and north of Lima on the ...
, motivated by the fishing boom; thousands of Andean immigrants arrive, attracted by the opportunity to earn a living in a thriving industrial city, while at the same time they assimilate themselves under the guise of 'modernity', all of which, from the point of the writer, brings dire consequences: loss of Andean cultural identity and its moral degeneracy, succumbing to the vices of the city in bars and brothels.


Context

According to the author's correspondence, the draft of the novel was first conceived in the early months of 1966. In letters to the Spanish editor Carlos Barral dated from that year, Arguedas tells him about a draft novel that would concern anchovy fishermen and the revolution produced by the fishmeal industry on the Peruvian coast. From other sources we know that the novelistic project was originally set in Puerto Supe, which also experienced the fishing boom, but was later displaced by Chimbote, where Arguedas traveled to several times to document and interview fishermen and port workers. It was mid-1968 when it occurred to him to sandwich between the fictional chapters of his novel some personal diaries, the first of which drew on the 10th, 11th, 13th, 15th and 16 May. This "first diary" appeared in the journal Amaru and sparked controversy with the Argentine writer Julio Cortázar, following intemperate criticism that he made regionalist or 'telluric' literature.Vargas Llosa 1996, pp. 285-286. It was a difficult time for the writer as he encountered a strong depressive crisis, which had already lead him to a previous suicide attempt (in 1966); he lived in continual battle against insomnia and pains in the neck and back. Yet he endeavoured to carry out the project and wrote four chapters (which form the first part of the book), by his accounts on the second and third day sandwiched into the work. The second diary is dated in Museo de Sitio de
Puruchuco Puruchuco is an archaeological site in Peru that was an administrative center of the Inca period (1438–1533), located in the Ate District, in Lima. History The construction of this architectural complex comes from the Inca culture. Puruchuco ...
in
Lima Lima ( ; ), originally founded as Ciudad de Los Reyes (City of The Kings) is the capital and the largest city of Peru. It is located in the valleys of the Chillón, Rímac and Lurín Rivers, in the desert zone of the central coastal part of ...
, February 1969, and the third day in Chile, in May of that year. In Chile the author also developed the second part of the book, but later announced himself to be mentally unfit to continue. That's when he prepared his suicide and purchased a revolver. In what was labelled as his "Last Diary?" (whose revision is dated October of that year) he said his life would be ended by a bullet; a month later he carried out his threat (November 1969). This was finally inserted into the work, along with an epilogue: a letter the author sent to the editor Gonzalo Losada giving his final provisions on the publication of the work, despite it having been truncated. It has been said with certainty that the writer's death ends the novel.


Notes


References

* Arguedas, José María Arguedas: ''El zorro de arriba y el zorro de abajo''. ALLCA XX/Ediciones UNESCO, Colección Archivos, 14. Madrid, 1990. Edición crítica coordinada por Éve-Marie Fell. * Cornejo Polar, Antonio: ''Historia de la literatura del Perú republicano''. Incluida en «Historia del Perú», Tomo VIII. Perú Republicano. Lima, Editorial Mejía Baca, 1980. * Sánchez, Luis Alberto: ''La literatura peruana''. Derrotero para una historia cultural del Perú, tomo V. Cuarta edición y definitiva. Lima, P. L. Villanueva Editor, 1975. * Vargas Llosa, Mario: ''La utopía arcaica''. José María Arguedas y las ficciones del indigenismo. Fondo de Cultura Económica. México, 1996. {{DEFAULTSORT:Fox From Up Above and the Fox From Down Below, The 1971 novels Works by José María Arguedas Novels by José María Arguedas Novels set in Peru Fiction set in the 1970s