
Summary
Las historias de la literatura argentina propenden a la acumulación de nombres propios y de fechas prolijas … Alguien, en un porvenir no lejano, tendrá el valor de reducir esta historia a sus grandes líneas y entonces resultará evidente la compleja y benéfica labor que Sur ha ejecutado en América. Eticamente, ha defendido la causa de la democracia contra las dictaduras; intelectualmente ha mantenido viva esa curiosidad universal que, según declaré, es acaso el rasgo mejor de los argentinos.
This study has attempted to outline the history of Sur, a history which has spanned (if we include the irregular production over the past fifteen years) half a century and some three hundred and fifty issues. In order to make sense of this complex, heterogeneous material, it has isolated several factors which, taken together, can be said to define the magazine.
The first of these is suggested by Borges, who does not differentiate between politics and intellectual enquiry. Sur's universalist standpoint implied that ‘ethically’ it would have to be against any form of dictatorship: this was conceived as a natural view of the world, which had nothing to do with political commitment. Another member of the Sur group, Ernesto Sábato, repeated Borges’ argument: ‘Jamás hubo alií ningún filtro ideológico o social, sólo había un filtro literario, que en ocasiones pudo ser equivocado, lo que es humano.’ Yet the magazine's claim to be apolitical cannot be seen as an objective reality.
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- SurA Study of the Argentine Literary Journal and its Role in the Development of a Culture, 1931–1970, pp. 198 - 202Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986