The works in which Armando Morales, Gioconda Belli and Omar Cabezas presented the guerrilla movement of the Nicaraguan revolution in 1979 reflect a common utopia: the "new pantheism": the individual only matters as part of a whole: struggle only makes sense if it is for a collective; woman is portrayed as mother earth... The Nicaraguan landscape provided the bases for the ideology of the revolution, presenting a confrontation taken up by the work of the three authors: simultaneously a protecting divinity and a brutal danger that obliged the combatants to reconsider their values, not from a theoretical viewpoint but from that of survival. The local landscape gave form to history, culture, and to the new and present-day Nicaraguan society.