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  1. Paseo. [Cuento - Texto completo.] José Donoso. 1. Esto sucedió cuando yo era muy chico, cuando mi tía Matilde y tío Gustavo y tío Armando, hermanos solteros de mi padre, y él mismo, vivían aún. Ahora están todos muertos. Es decir, prefiero suponer que están todos muertos, porque resulta más fácil, y ya es demasiado tarde para ...

  2. Although he had left his country in the sixties for personal reasons, after 1973 he said his exile was also a form of protest against the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.

  3. Paseo, by José Donoso. Notes to the text, created by Professor A.K.G. Paterson (now Emeritus), and revised by Dr Gustavo San Román. We hope you find these notes helpful, but tell Dr San Román if you think there are still passages that could be illuminated by new material.

  4. Sep 22, 2020 · One of the recurring symbols or images of Donoso’s fiction is the decaying mansion, often a Victorian monstrosity replete with gables and turrets, balconies whose only function is decorative, passages leading nowhere, closed or walled-up rooms, and other elements representative of a decadent or outmoded lifestyle.

  5. Mar 2, 2014 · Jose Donoso’s short story entitled Paseo reveals the isolationist life of a family in mid-twentieth-century Chile, a situation which goes hand in hand with the lives of the Chilean people under strict military rule and a conservative regime.

  6. Paseo, by José Donoso. Section 1. Para Mabel Cardahi. Esto sucedio cuando yo era muy chico, cuando mi tía Matilde y tío Gustavo y tío Armando, hermanos solteros de mi padre, y él mismo, vivían aún. Ahora están todos muertos.

  7. Paseo, by José Donoso. Unit 12. Articles. Before dealing with the use of the Spanish articles, el/la/los/las, and un/una, note that the form el is attached to feminine singular nouns that begin with a stressed a: e.g. el ala, el hambre, el alma, el arte.

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