Gabriela Cabezón Cámara: 'Milei is turning all of Argentina into a mining company'
Translated from Swedish, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.
At a glance
- Argentinian author Gabriela Cabezón Cámara criticizes President Milei's policies, stating he is turning the entire country into a mining company.
- Cámara, a prominent voice in contemporary Argentinian literature, debuted as a novelist at age 41 after enduring hyperinflation and odd jobs.
- She shared insights with Dagens Nyheter about her near-fatal passion for reading, transformative rainforest experiences, and visions of a future beyond machines and apocalypse.
Gabriela Cabezón Cámara, now a leading figure in Argentinian contemporary literature, voices strong criticism against President Javier Milei's administration. She asserts that Milei's policies are fundamentally transforming Argentina into a large-scale mining operation, prioritizing resource extraction above all else.
Milei is turning the entire country into a mining company.
Cámara's own life story is one of resilience. She did not begin her literary career until the age of 41, having navigated the harsh economic realities of hyperinflation in Argentina through various odd jobs. Her path to becoming a celebrated author was hard-won, marked by personal struggle and a deep-seated passion for reading.
She debuted only at age 41, after surviving the hyperinflation years on rice and odd jobs.
In an interview with Dagens Nyheter's Samuel Levander, Cámara delved into profound personal experiences. She spoke of how her intense desire to read nearly cost her life, described transformative encounters in the rainforest, and articulated her forward-looking visions. These visions extend beyond a dystopian future dominated by technology and destruction, offering a more nuanced perspective on what lies ahead.
She tells DN's Samuel Levander about when her passion for reading almost killed her, transformative experiences in the rainforest, and visions of the future that go beyond machines and apocalypse.
Originally published by Dagens Nyheter in Swedish. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.