15 pages 30 minutes read

Octavio Paz

Wind, Water, Stone

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1979

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Background

Historical Context

Octavio Paz’s lifelong involvement in and passion for politics could be said to have been borne out of his literal birth into political activism. His father was assistant to Emiliano Zapata, the leader of one of the Mexican Revolution’s factions. The revolution is generally considered to have lasted 10 years, from 1910 to 1920. While Paz was only born in 1914, the Revolution would have lasting impacts on his family, childhood, and subsequent adult interests.

The Mexican revolution—like many political upheavals—is a remarkably complex political happening, with several different factions and shifts in power. However, in order to understand the context of Octavio Paz’s writing, it is crucial to understand the role of Zapata and his followers, the Zapatistas. Before the revolution began, Mexico was organized under the unpopular but mostly stable rule of President Porfirio Díaz. When power struggles escalated between the wealthy and the middle class, and Díaz jailed a wealthy landowner political adversary challenging him for the 1910 presidential election, an armed uprising began. When the Mexican Federal Army proved incompetent in dealing with the conflict, the uprising gained steam until the jailed adversary was installed as the new president, Francisco Madero.

However, in the wake of violent political upheaval, the agrarian peasants of southern Mexico also fought for their interests against the new and untested wealthy landowner’s regime.

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