San Juan, Puerto Rico : Fundación Puertorriqueña de las Humanidades
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
Originally presented as the author's Master's thesis. Could be used as a guide for reading Crónica de una muerte anunciada. Contains an extensive bibliography.
Hildensheim, Zürich, and New York : Georg Olms Verlag
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
297p.
Notes:
Includes the following relevant articles: "¿Descolonización de la historia? El caso de la novela histórica en la región norteandina" by Brigitte König pp. 51-72; and "¿Descolonización de la historia? El caso de la historiografía en la región norteandina" by Hans-Joachim König pp. 27-49.
Salamanca, Spain : Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
302 : 217 p.
Notes:
Previously published under Ceiba Editores in 1992. The considerable criticism and interpretative literature about Gabriel García Márquez has transformed him into a "stranger," and for the Colombian readership, his work has become something "unknown," states Carmenza Kline. Her goal is to give back the original spirit of the works, which was prevalent at the time of their writing. She provides excellent coverage of articles written about García Márquez and his works in the Colombian Press, something which is not always available in the USA.
Colombia : Fundación General de la Universidad de Salamanca, Sede Colombia
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
233 p.
Notes:
Explores how García Márquez incorporates violent imagery and themes in his work and how this depiction of violence links his narrative to conflict in contemporary Colombia. Prologue by Darío Jaramillo, p.xi-xxii.
Cáceres, Spain : Universidad de Extremadura, Servicio de Publicaciones
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
260 p.
Notes:
The book analyzes Gabriel García Márquez's journalistic history alongside his ability to compose great novels. Molina chooses different journalistic and literary texts from García Márquez, written at different times, to demonstrate how he combines his storytelling ability and his journalistic craft.
"El meollo de la obra es que, cuando se haya leído una obra de García Márquez, tengamos, a nuestro alcance, todos o casi todos los detalles de la obra para poderlos usar más tarde, en el momento adecuado y con la garantía de la seriedad de nuestras citas o referencias. No es un libro para leerlo de un solo tirón. No. Esa no es la finalidad."
"Tampoco lo fue el anerior sobre la zoologia. Puede decirse, si con ello nos damos a entender mejor, que este libro es un libro 'referencial' o 'institucional' para una mejor memoria de las obras de GGM, y sea para propios o extraños de su obra."
México, DF: México : Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Xochimilco
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
"In the current essay, Eliana Albala- with proof in her hands- objectively reveals the precise formula of a writer who practices witchcraft and alchemy, but that in his sintaxis, is the most obedient and respectful knower of the classics in his language." -Back cover of book
In this book Gene H. Bell-Villada has compiled a series of interviews by various authors. In his introduction he states, "This particular Conversations gathering comes with an unusual feature: it contains several interviews that were conducted by Latin Americans and/or Colombians, sometimes on Latin American soil, and always in Spanish, sans interpreters. In each of these instances the culture and nationality of the interviewer makes an enormous difference for the dynamics of the exchange. The encounters in Castilian offer a glimpse of the author at his most informal, forthright, and personable."
This work relies on the hypothesis that Aureliano Buendía's character is based on the life of General Ramón Demetrio Morán. Thus Henríquez affirms that One Hundred Years of Solitude has been written in code and the literary style of the Nobel's fantasy and imagination impeded to find the true background of the novel.
"Since the appearance of the first publication of One Hundred Years of Solitude (1970) in German, Gabriel García Márquez is considered one of the great authors of present literature in Germany. Gabriel García Márquez's success culminated with the Nobel Prize in 1982 and now begins again through his autobiography, Living to Tell the Tale. Harald Irnberger, who has known Gabriel García Márquez and his works for thirty years, looks beyond the magic realism and into the political and journalistic aspects of Gabriel García Márquez. This book submits numerous facts and interpretations." -www.amazon.de