Pedro Mir (born June 3, 1913, San Pedro de Macorís, Dom.Rep.—died July 11, 2000, Santo Domingo) was a Dominican poet, whose poems celebrate the working class and examine aspects of his country’s painful past, including colonialism, slavery, and dictatorship.
By his mid-30s Mir had developed a prominent literary reputation. His social commentary, however, angered Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo, and Mir was forced into exile in 1947. He spent the next 15 years in Cuba (where he published what is perhaps his best-known poetry collection, Hay un país en el mundo [“There Is a Country in the World”], in 1949), Mexico, and the Soviet Union. Mir returned to the Dominican Republic in 1962, a few months after Trujillo’s assassination, and continued his prolific writing career, publishing essays and novels as well as poems.
Mir was awarded the Dominican Republic’s National Prize for History in 1975 and its National Prize for Literature for lifetime achievement in 1993. He was also appointed national poet in 1982, a post he held until his death. A selection of his poems in English translation appears in Countersong to Walt Whitman, and Other Poems (1993).