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Ernesto Guevara

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Guevara, Ernesto

 

(full name, Guevara de la Serna; also called Che). Born June 14, 1928, in Rosario, Argentina; died Oct. 8 (?), 1967, near Higueras, Bolivia. Latin American revolutionary; one of the leaders of the Cuban Revolution of 1959; major.

The son of an architect, Guevara was a doctor by profession. During Perón’s rule he was forced to emigrate from Argentina (1952). Guevara met F. Castro Ruz in Mexico in 1955, and from that time he bound his life to the Cuban people’s struggle for freedom. In December 1956 he landed with a revolutionary detachment in Oriente Province, Cuba. In 1957 he was appointed commander of a partisan column. In December 1958, Guevara’s column liberated the province of Las Villas, inflicted a decisive defeat on the troops of the dictator Batista in the city of Santa Clara, and, with C. Cienfuegos’ column, victoriously entered Havana.

After the victory of the Cuban Revolution of 1959, Guevara actively participated in building socialism in Cuba. He was appointed chief of the garrison of the La Cabana fortress in Havana and director of the country’s Administration of Industrial Development. From November 1959 to February 1961 he was president of the National Bank of Cuba. In February 1961 he became minister of industry. Guevara was a leader of the July 26 Movement and later a member of the National Leadership of the United Party of the Socialist Revolution.

In April 1965, Guevara sent a letter to Castro on his decision to continue fighting in the revolutionary movement in some other country of the world, and he left Cuba. In November 1966 he arrived in Bolivia to organize the partisan movement. In October 1967 the partisan detachment he had created was surrounded and destroyed by government troops, who enjoyed extensive US support in this operation. Guevara was wounded, taken prisoner, and killed.

WORKS

El socialismo y el hombre en Cuba. Havana, 1965.
Obras, 1957-1967, vols. 1-2. Havana, 1970.
In Russian translation:
“Boliviiskii dnevnik.” Novoe vremia, 1968, no. 42, appendix.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Benicio Del Toro puts in another good turn as the increasingly isolated Ernesto Guevara (Benicio Del Toro) as he leads the charge.
Part Two focuses on the increasingly isolated Ernesto Guevara (Benicio Del Toro) as he leads the charge from the front lines, his relationships with Alieda March (Catalina Sandino Moreno) and Tania (Franka Potente), and his ultimate fate at the hands of the relentless Bolivian military.***
STEVEN Soderbergh's latest project is a two-part study of guerilla fighter Ernesto Guevara.
Which is why, like Ta ran-tino's Grindhouse two years ago, this study of Argentina-born guerilla fighter Ernesto Guevara has been chopped into more manageable halves.
Other highly anticipated films are Baz Luhrman's "Australia," starring Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman, and Steven Soderbergh's "Che," a film that narrates the life of Argentinean revolutionary Ernesto Guevara.
Part one begins intriguingly with a flurry of time-jumps showing Ernesto Guevara at different times and places: Meeting Fidel Castro for the first time in Mexico in 1955, in Havana and at the United Nations in 1964, onboard a ship in 1956 heading to Cuba with Castro and 80 other revolutionaries who formed the core of their movement, and suffering from asthma in the jungle the following year.
"For Ernesto Guevara," Anderson averred, "everything began with literature."
Considering film as poetic language that constructs significations, Salles uncovers Che Guevara's path to revolution with powerful metaphors of images and sounds, which make of the young Ernesto Guevara a hero out of his weaknesses.
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