
Part of Series
Un pagès del país no serà mai un labrador ni un campesino, sinó una figura humana personal, perfectament individuada i distinta. Un pagès és un pagès i res més que un pagès, com perfectament indica aquesta paraula intraduïble. Jo lamento sincerament que per a anomenar pagès un pagès no hi hagi una paraula més adequada i més exacta. Si n'hi hagués una, la utilitzaria, perquè els escrits han d'ésser clars i concrets. Ara bé, com que no existeix, hem d'estar a les resultes dels fets i prescindir de les elucubracions dels estilistes, que en l'època que vivim han tingut una tendència a fer morir de riure la gent.
Author

Josep Pla i Casadevall (known as José Pla in Spanish) (March 8, 1897, Palafrugell, Girona - April 23, 1981, Llofriu, Girona) was a Catalan journalist and a popular author. As a journalist he worked in France, Italy, England, Germany and Russia, from where he wrote political and cultural chronicles in Catalan. The most important characteristics of the “planian” style are simplicity, irony, and clarity. His works show a subjective and colloquial view, “anti-literary”, in which he stresses, nevertheless, an enormous stylistic effort by calling things by their names and “coming up with the precise adjective”, one of his most persistent literary obsessions. Pla lived completely dedicated to writing. The extent of his Obres Completes - Complete Works (46 volumes and nearly 40,000 pages), which is a collection of all his journals, reports, articles, essays, biographies and both long and short novels. His liberal-conservative thought, skeptic and uncompromising, filled with irony and common sense, keeps sounding contemporary, completely current, even though it seems to contradict the current cultural establishment same as it did with its completely opposed antecessor. His books remain in print and both Spanish and Catalan critics have unanimously recognized him as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.