Pittsburgh, PA : Instituto Nacional de Literatura Iberoamericana
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
68(201) : 1067-1080
Notes:
Olsen analyzes the African presence in Del amor y otros demonios, in which this culture takes a very central and explicit role, unlike in his other narrative works. This essay proposes that the novel, by giving a multitude of colonially-marginalized characters a voice, participates in a project to question colonialism and modernity that has traditionally silenced and excluded these groups in Latin American literary works.
Lewis suggests several books that have been especially selected for their currency of pertinence to events or people in the news. These include Teaching as a Subversive Activity by Postman and Charles Weingartner, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America by Barbara Ehrenreich, and One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez.
Williams reviews major Colombian novels published during the 1970s, pointing out the influence of Cien años de soledad on Colombian writers, especially in the use of humor. He also states that El otoño del patriarca was the most important novel of the 1970s, which show a complex narrative technique. In it, García Márquez leaves behind Macondo and its inhabitants.
"First there will be a brief technical outline of the relationship between fiction and history, for which I owe a good part of my reflection to the work of Paul Ricoeur, as well as to authors such as Hayden White, Le Goff, Roger Chartier, Frederick Jameson, Beatriz Sarlo, Roberto Schwarz and Antonio Cándido. Secondly, I will present an outline focusing on Colombian literature, still in process, from two novels, Pax by José María Rivas Groot y Lorenzo Marroquín, and One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez. I am unsure how conscious is the relationship between the two, but what is certain is that the first influences the intention of the second."
"A multicultural and pluriethnic country like Colombia, composed of regions so varied and governed by a political-administrative system so centralized and which needs such substantial changes, requires a history of its literature concomitant with its nature and the cultural processes that are occurring here. As a symbolic meditation on a society and as an expression of its individual and collective realities, literature plays a determining role in the configuration of our identities. To advocate this will better equip us to enter into a dialogue with all the cultures of this planet, an option that is today possible thanks to the communication revolution which has made a reality of the global village spoken by McLuhan."
"To debate, question, and revise the past and the future of literary reality goes beyond making an inventory of works and authors. It requires making a better appraisal in order to highlight Colombian literature in the context of its historiography to attempt to convert these literary histories into the history of a culture." Escobar Mesa notes the importance of García Márquez as a pioneer in magical realism and its effect on literature.
"Penetrating analyses of novels and short stories by the most eminent writers of today: Sábato, Cortázar, Onetti, Roa Bastos, Arguedas, Vargas Llosa, García Márquez, Carpentier, Yáñez, Rulfo, and others."
Also published in English in the Paris Review (no. 166, 2003). In November 2000, Paternostro landed in Barranquilla from New York. Her mission was not to write the counterpart of Gabriel García Márquez's memoirs, but to reconstruct Gabriel García Márquez's life by a rich American magazine, that probably didn't know that Gabriel García Márquez himself was writing his memoirs. This extensive article narrates the story and findings of Paternostro while in Colombia.
Figueroa recounts his travels to Colombia and Ecuador in search of information pertaining to his dissertation. He argues that "realismo mágico and indigenismo have been appropriated in a nationalistic way in Ecuador and Colombia since the 1970s."
Purdue, IN : CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
Viewed on 24 January, 2008.|Vega-Gonzalez makes a comparison between García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude and Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon in terms of memory and family history.
Rama discusses the process of transculturation in Latin American narrative, which occurred when the urban, modernist literary movements of fantastic and critical realist literature challenged the prevailing regionalist literary movement in the 1930s. Although initially hostile to this foreign and urban encroachment, regionalist authors developed a literature that rearticulated their cultural structure but maintained its rural orientation, thus enacting a model of "cultural plasticity" in which the traditional and the new are integrated. The modernist interest in fantastic literature, for example, led regionalist authors to reexamine mythical sources that had been hidden by their preference for social realism. A brief reading of works by Jose Maria Arguedas, Juan Rulfo, Joáo Guimaráes Rosa, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez exemplifies this process of transculturation.
A passage from Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel, Leaf Storm (1957), is used as an example to explain transculturation literature. The naturalist voice of the narrator is substituted for an "outward and inward vision," allowing the villager's perspective on modernization to coexist with an external view of events. Garcia Marquez's techniques provoke observations about literary historiography as the movement of culture, tradition, and institutions rather than as a project of classification.
Bertussi briefly analyzes the poetry and fiction of several well-known 19th and 20th century Latin American writers to explore the role of literary texts in the liberation process and social transformation. At issue are the definitive, inspirational, galvanizing, informative, cathartic, and transformational powers of Latin American literature and legacy of poetry and fiction in Latin America. All these are recorded through the works of Argentinean poet Jose Hernandez (1834-1886), Chilean poet/writer Pablo Neruda (1904-1973), and Brazilian novelist Jose Lins Do Rego (1901-1957), and the still active literary figures of Peruvian writer/politician Mario Vargas Llosa, Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez, and Chilean novelist Isabel Allende. All are examined as agents of social transformation who identify and disseminate the human rights movements at work in their respective nations.
Bogotá, Colombia : Instituto de Estudios Politicos y Relaciones Internacionales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
43 : 100-112
Notes:
This article views Gabriel Garcia Marquez's (1972) "La increible y triste historia de la cándida Erendira y su abuela desalmada (The Incredible and Sad Tale of Innocent Erendira and her Heartless Grandmother)" as not simply rhetoric but a portrait of the human experience of power. The story, style, structure, and social geographical context of the book are contrasted with those of other works by García Márquez. The psychology of the grandmother in the books is tied to that of the mythical dictator in El otoño del patriarca (The Autumn of the Patriarch; the author modeled this personality type on numerous Latin American and historical dictators, with parts drawn from Shakespeare and Italian neorealist films. Religious, sexual, and material symbols of power in the story are discussed.
Medellín, Colombia : Editorial Universidad de Antioquia
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
436
Notes:
"Este cursillo va a tratar de una tésis sobre la formación de la literatura, apoyada fundamentalmente en textos de la novelística de García Márquez, lo cual indica usar un tanto a García Márquez como ejemplo para la demostración de una teoría literaria. Ahora bien, los textos fundamentales que vamos a trabajar son 'La hojarasca', 'El coronel no tiene quién le escriba', y 'Cien años de soledad'; además usaremos, desde luego, algunos otros materiales que pertenecen a cuentos o diversas fuentes e informaciones que reseñaré directamente y por extenso si es necesario."
"According to many testimonies, like García Márquez's exact contemporary the Mexican Carlos Fuentes or the Colombian critic many years younger than both, Michael Palencia Roth, 'Cien años de soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude)' is the one novel where Latin Americans recognize themselves instantly: their own social, cultural reality, their families, and the history of their countries. It is also the mirror in which a generation of Europeans and North Americans, by the millions, since its publication, have discovered the magical reality of an exotic continent, and a taste for its hallucinatory literature. Are they reading the same novel?"
This book makes references to Gabriel García Márquez on pages 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 62, 63, 64, 65, 69, 74, 76, 85, 238, 270-275, 279-280, 305, 308, 310, 315.
The the following novels are mentioned:
"El amor en tiempos del cólera" ("Love in the Time of Cholera) 88.
"Cien años de soledad" ("One Hundred Years of Solitude") 2, 5, 15, 59, 61, 62, 63, 74, 85, 86, 94, 239, 258-267, 291, 302, 306, 308, 310.
"Crónica de una muerta anunciada" ("Chronicle of a Death Foretold") 88, 266.
"El coronel no tiene quien le escribe" ("No One Writes to the Colonel)62.
"Los funerales de la Mamá Grande" ("Big Mama's Funeral") 74.
"La hojarasca" 265.
"La mala hora" ("In Evil Hour") 62, 74.
"El Otoño del patriarca" ("The Autumn of the Patriarch") 10, 62, 265.
This book discusses the history and criticism in Latin American fiction in the 20th century and mentions Gabriel García Márquez on pages 11, 24-37, and 42-45.
San José, Costa Rica : Editorial de la Universidad de Costa Rica
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
This book talks about love and betrayal within Latin American literature and film. The book has a section entitled "García Márquez en el cine: la primera pasión." The book includes a list of GGM books that have been adapted into film (347), as well as copies of the film poster for "Crónica de una muerte anunciada" (1986).
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
62(723) : pp. 6
Notes:
"Bercht en 'Los negocios del señor Junio César' nos decía que los grandes hombres se han esforzado siempre por ocultar el verdadero móvil de sus actos. Sin lugar a dudas, Julio César era un gran hombre, y quizás por esta razón García Márquez habría de afirmar que aprendió mucho de él, esto es, que aprehendió los modos de actuación que adoptó su fascinante delirio de dictador. García Márquez hubiera quierido crear un personaje como el Julio César en la literatura (1), pero Roma no es el Caribe y sus dictafores no son [grandes hombres]. Lo único que permanece invariable en ambos casos es el enigma del poder, su delirio. Entonces, la pregunta se precipita: por quéno se cuentan siempre las mismas historias del mismo modo?"
This is an article in a weekly encyclopedia of World Literature put out by Asahi Shinbunsha. This issue deals with history and criticism of Latin American literature and focuses on García Márquez and Manuel Puig, both popular in Japan.
Princeton, NJ : Films for the Humanities & Sciences
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Notes:
In this interview with Silvia Lemus, Gabriel García Márquez discusses his life and work from a highly personal stand point. This is an episode of the television program "Tratos y retratos."
"This article is about the role of García Márquez and particularly macondismo as an ideology in establishing the canonic validity of vallenato as a folk genre from the Colombian Caribbean. García Márquez's chronicles of the early 1950's are seen as foundational texts on the aesthetics and value of vallenato; texts which influence subsequent writings on the topic. One of the main topics explored is how these texts acquire canonic validity through the success of One Hundred Years of Solitude. It is then that macondismo - the Latin Americanist celebration of magical realism - becomes an interpretive metaphor for Colombia, and vallenato music becomes the sonorous emblem of this metaphor. This occurs through García Márquez's writings, his multiple interventions in Colombian vallenato festivals, and the way vallenato is subsequently taken by a journalistic elite of the country as representing a macondian sonorous paradigm. The article explores how these different elements coalesce in constructing a genealogy of aurality for vallenato, setting the parameters of its interpretive significance through multiple processes of folklorisation of the genre."
"Twenty years after Gabriel García Márquez received the Nobel prize, Ronaldo Menéndez, literary critic and lecturer, offers a de-mythified version of his creative world."
"When reciting the many qualities of Gabriel García Márquez's writing, critics invariably include his humor. Unfortunately, when readers have to read works in translation, they often miss much of the richness of the original work, including the humor. However, Gregory Rabassa's English translation of García Márquez still provides many linguistic pleasures, not the least of which is the discovery of symbolic repetitions and of the multilayered references submerged within an apparently simple sentence-particularly those that begin the different chapters. Indeed, this joy of discovery often erupts in outright guffawing when we realize that the devilish author frequently turns the references ironically on our expectations and even, on occasion, deliberately misleads us."
Copenhagen, Denmark : Institut d'études romanes de l'Université de Copenhague
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
40(2) : 274-88
Notes:
"Este artículo presenta un análisis de 'Relato de un náufrago,' opúsculo híbrido de la primera etapa de la obra de Gabriel García Márquez, en el contexto genérico de la llamada narrativa de naufragios. Partiendo de una observación sobre el renovado interés por la literatura de naufragios, se revisan algunos ejemplos históricos de esta forma textual que hacen eco en la obra. A pesar de la presencia del naufragio como 'tema' en la literatura e historiografía hispanoamericanos, llama al atención la ausencia de un género específico para su representación narrativa, algo que sí se da en la tradición portuguesa. Es la tesis del presente trabajo que 'Relato de un náufrago' representa una reinvención de la narrativa de naufragios para las letras hispanoamericanas, poniéndola a la vez al tanto con el contexto político y literario del siglo XX."
"Presents a contextual analysis of the books 'A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,' by Gabriel García Márquez and 'The Lesson,' by Toni Cade Bambara. Overview of the story of each book; Subjects discussed in the books; Characters in the books."
This critical essay examines the theme of love in Gabriel García Marquez's work, which the author claims is "depicted as a doom, a demonic possession, a disease that, once contracted, cannot easily be cured."
San Juan, Puero Rico : Universidad de Puerto Rico Faculdad de Humanidades
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
31(2) : 59
Notes:
"George McMurray, in his 1985 article, commented upon the links between the apocalyptic ending of 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' and the epiphany of Borges' 'El Aleph.' In this study I trace the origins of this vision in the work of the Colombian writer. As a young journalist, García Márquez wrote over 800 newspaper columns, several of which demonstrate his fascination for these pinnacle moments of vision or knowledge, a momentary glimpse of all time and space, an instant where the human imagination can capture the meaning of the universe. The novelist has repeatedly pointed to his early journalism as the laboratory for his mature fiction, the site that allowed him the opportunity for literary experimentation. It is my contention that the origins of the last Buendia's epiphany can be glimpsed in several columns which represent a leitmotif in García Márquez's early writing."
Salamanca, Spain : Asociación Española de Estudios Anglo-Norteamericanos
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
27(2) : 27-40
Notes:
"After locating US writer Jeffrey Eugenides against the background of recent minimalist fiction, this essay evaluates the influence of García Márquez's narratives 'Cien años de soledad' and 'Crónica de una muerte anunciada' on his first novel, 'The Virgin Suicides'. Centered on the novel's magical-realist features, the contrastive analysis contends that 'The Virgin Suicides' revives a distinctive modernist mythical impulse. Based on its literary borrowings, this impulse materializes in the endorsement of ancestral beliefs in a female principle and in the ethical demand to put an end to the gradual annihilation of the planet by post-industrial societies."
"In her article, 'Memory and the Quest for Family History in One Hundred Years of Solitude and Song of Solomon,' Susana Vega-González explores similarities between the novels of García Márquez and Morrison with a special focus on the use of memory and imagination. Based on theoretical models, Vega-González proposes that fictional representations are a means of rewriting history, a particular aspect of literary discourse. The texts under scrutiny constitute true quest stories of characters who search for their family history along their own identity amidst the dangers of capitalism and its excessive desire for progress and class ascent. The break with advocacy of hybridity are some of the features that link Morrison and García Márquez with magical realism, a literary mode that contributes to their rewriting of a history peopled with the ghosts of slavery, colonialism, and imperialism."
"Communities of people have different ways of explaining the world around them and events that occur to them, and these codes for interpreting reality can clash when brought into contact with each other. Latin American writers and scholars have often said that such a clash produces the atmosphere we have come to label magical realist in literature; construing the theory in quite territorial terms, they have claimed that the specific circumstances of Latin America have produced magical realism. In this essay, I explore the use if magical realism in a famous episode from García Márquez's 'Cien años de soledad'. The instance of the insomnia plague has fascinated readers and has attracted various interpretations from academics; these have usually been centered around cultural readings. I explore the passage from three distinct perspectives, cultural, historical and literary. García Márquez's 'Cien años de soledad' is a work rich in historical and literary sources, and in order to help determine the impact of political and cultural happenings upon his work, I have also referred extensively to García Márquez's recently published memoirs, which have enabled me to make reasoned judgments about the different spheres of influence upon García Márquez's work."
"The Western circus tradition provides a particularly relevant framework for representations of animals in magic realist fiction, since magic realism and the circus are both closely related to Bakhtin's idea of the carnivalesque. Conceptualized as 'circensian spaces', the circus' influence on magical realism manifests itself as what Foucault calls 'heterotopias', 'other spaces', which are inherently contradictory, polyphonic, and 'impossible to think'. As the circus traditionally represents, reinforces and at the same time subverts Western conceptualizations of animals, this discussion focuses on the relationship between Linnaean taxonomy and circensian spaces in Peter Carey's 'Illywhacker', Richard Flanagan's 'Gould's Book of Fish', Gabriel García Márquez's 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' and Isabel Allende's 'The House of the Spirits'. This article examines the significance of circensian animal spaces within the Australian and Latin American context, and discusses why 'circensian animals' may be particularly suitable agents in the subversion of Western paradigms."
"Este artículo presenta un análisis de 'Relato de un náufrago', opúsculo híbrido de la primera etapa de la obra de Gabriel García Márquez, en el contexto genérico de la llamada narrativa de naufragios. Partiendo de una observación sobre el renovado interés por la literatura de naufragios, se revisan algunos ejemplos históricos de esta forma textual que hacen eco en la obra. A pesar de la presencia del naufragio como tema en la literatura e historiografía hispanoamericanos, llama la atención la ausencia de un género específico para su representación narrativa, algo que sí se da en la tradición portuguesa. Es la tesis del presente trabajo que 'Relato de un naufrago' representa una reinvención de la narrativa de naufragios para las letras hispanoamericanas, poníendola a la vez al tanto con el contexto político y literario del siglo XX."
"Ahora que el realismo mágico es un capítulo de la historia de la literatura hispanoamericana, 'Cien años de soledad' revela su capacidad inagotada para tolerar y aun proponer nuevas significaciones, y entre ellas merece atención la que cabe relacionar con García Márquez y con su necesidad de dejar testimonio de su infacia, trascurrida en una casa grande y muy triste, con una hermana que comía tierra, una abuela que adivinaba el porvenir, un abuelo que evocaba recuerdos incesantes de una interminable guerra civil y numerosos parientes de nombres iguales que nunca alcanzaron a percibir claramente los límites que seraraban la demencia y la felicidad."
Santiago de Chile, Chile : Editorial Universidad Católica
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
30 : p66
Notes:
"El presente trabajo es parte del Seminario de Graduación del Depto. de Castellano en esta Universidad titulado 'Cien años de soledad, una novela mítica'. El seminario fue dirigido por la Prof. Adriana Valdés y en él participaron las siguientes alumnas: Sara Almarza, Inés Araya, Carmen Foxley, M. Elena Rodríguez, M. Isabel Spoerer, Marta Ulfe y Carmen Avaria."
Canada : Concordia University, Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
31(61) : pp. 236-238
Notes:
De Marinis states: "La extraordinaria y onerosa herencia legada por el boom de la literatura latinoamericana acercó como efecto inmediato para autores y críticos, una suerte de desconcierto y una búsqueda de caminos alternativos que permitieran superar tanto los fracasos de aquel movimiento como sus inadecuaciones respecto a los cambios contextuales que advinieron con el ocaso de la modernidad." He concludes "en el acto de la recepción, las clases marginales y periféricas (y sus artistas) procesan la información recibida, la transforman y la devuelven como acto de resistencia que las convierte en sujetos actives, productivos y, por ende, creativos, capaces de articular sus propios gustos y objetos estéticos."
Deborah Cohn examines the interplay of the Cuban Revolution and the promotion and translation of Latin American literature in the United States during the Latin American literature "Boom." She studies the motivations that promoted cross-cultural understanding and describes the success of prominent Latin American authors such as Gabriel García Márquez.
Caleb Bach discusses Gregory Rabassa, a translator of many famous Latin American Works. He talks about the Rabassa's greatest qualities as a veteran translator and the effects of his work in the preservation of writings by many Latin American authors, including Gabriel García Márquez.
Mary Lusky Friedman discusses the Memoirs of Isabel Allende and Alma Guillermoprieto. She compares and contrasts the works of these prominent writers to those of the Boom writers, including Gabriel García Márquez.
This article lists the Neustadt Laureates from 1970 through 2006. It also lists the Puterbaugh Fellows from 1968 through 2005. Gabriel García Márquez was a 1972 Laureate.
Washington, D.C. : Organisation of American States
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
57(1) : p. 64
Notes:
This article presents a short story written by Gabriel García Márquez about man named Abel Quezada. The story focuses on the issues dealing with Quezada's life and his personal troublings.
María José Navia discusses the work by Margarita Saona. Saona describes and analyzes the relationship between the novel and the nation in contemporary Latin American literature. Navia notes that the first chapters of Saona's work are dedicated to the writings of Gabriel García Márquez, Isabel Allende, and José Donoso.
Washington, D.C. : Organisation of American States
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
59(3) : pp. 78-95
Notes:
Contreras discusses Mario Vargas Llosa's studies on Gabriel García Márquez and his work "Cien años de soledad." Contreras talks about the controversy as to why some of Llosa's work had not been translated and the issues with its publication.
Washington, D.C. : Organization of American States
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
63(4) : pp. 656-658
Notes:
Rosario studies and discusses the cultural and social implications of Ignacio López-Calvo's "God and Trujillo". Along with other analysis of the work, Rosario focuses on Calvo's view of Gabriel García Márquez, among others, during the dictatorship of Trujillo.
Arlington, VA : Society for Latin American Anthropology
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
12(1) : pp. 254-255
Notes:
Aizenberg studies the Latin American narrative and issues reflecting the "boom" era, but focuses on Latin American writings before the 1960's phenomena.
"This article, inspired by a TV interview with the Nobel Prize-winner Gabriel García Márquez, revises the ways that the fiction in One Hundred Years of Solitude has been accepted as history. In particular, it raises some questions about how literary critics and historians have accepted as history Garci?a Ma?rquez's rendition of the events during the strike that took place in Colombia in 1928. It examines the repressive nature of the Colombian regime and of the strike itself; it also examines the idea that following the strike there was a sort of 'conspiracy of silence' to erase the truth from the nation's history."
"Analyzes how the articulation of memory accomplishes a therapeutic purpose in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel `Chronicle of a Death Foretold.' Translation of the memory of events into language to reach the soothing consciousness of meaning; Plot; Central dramatic triad and characterology; Psychological structure of the novel; Sociocultural structure; Theory of seduction."-- EBSCOhost
London, UK : Routledge for the Institute of Psycho-Analysis
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
79(2) : 317-331
Notes:
"In this paper the author discusses the situation of children handed over to grandparents or to other relatives of the natural parents to be brought up. She notes that such children are faced with the riddle of their own filiation and postulates that this scenario often conceals an oedipal fantasy to the effect that the child concerned is the fruit of an incestuous relationship between a grandparent and the relevant parent. Following the example of Freud, the author adduces literary models for illustration. As with the Oedipus of Sophocles, the author shows how efforts to thwart the workings of fate actually bring about the consummation of the tragedy in the form of incest, which is favoured by the confused oedipal configuration in the families of handed-over children. The main argument is based on the characters and situations of two novels by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, written at different times in his life. With reference to the psychoanalytic literature on artistic creativity, the author shows the importance of the mid-life crisis in determining how Garcia Marquez came to terms with the fact of having himself been entrusted to grandparents as a child and how this situation is reflected in the works concerned." -- Scopus
"This Special Issue contains 12 papers on the theme of literature which holds representations beyond geographical reality, invoking instead states of mind, moods, and milieus, which widen our understanding of the world. Specifically, the following themes are addressed: the influence of Anglo-American humanist geography and the lesser known directions pursued by European humanist geographers; the experiences of a mental institution as portrayed by Janet Frame's Faces in the water; understandings of landscape and inscape from the writings of the eastern Ontario region; recent developments in literary resource interpretation; writing and iconography in romantic voyaging in the Alps; Dicken's representation of London and its reliance on verisimilitude; the texts of Beatrix Potter as a form of cultural communication; the works of Ippolito Nievo and what they reveal about the Friulian landscape; tellurism, mythical realism and magical realism in the works of South Americal writers Jose M. Arguedas, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and Pablo Neruda; and poets and narrators and their local perceptions of Mendoza, Argentina." -- Scopus
"In the present review of twelve pieces produced by distinguished 20th century Latin American writers--Jorge Luis Borges from Argentina, Jorge Amado and Joa?o Ubaldo Ribeiro from Brazil, Jose? Donoso from Chile, Gabriel Garci?a Ma?rquez from Colombia, Alejo Carpentier from Cuba, Miguel Angel Asturias from Guatemala, Octavio Paz from Mexico, Mario Vargas Llosa from Peru?, Horacio Quiroga and Mario Benedetti from Uruguay and Arturo Uslar-Pietri from Venezuela--paragraphs or parts of paragraphs in which parasitological or entomological situations of the most varied hues are referred to or described, have been extracted in a selective form. Sometimes in these descriptions appear, local or regional expressions, without ignoring colorful folklore representations. For a easier interpretation these or part of these paragraph sentences have been arranged by thematic similarities. In a varied and kaleidoscopic vision, it will be possible to find protozoiasis (malaria, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, amebiasis), helminthiases (ascariasis, hydatidosis, trichinosis, schistosomiasis, cysticercosis, onchocerciasis), parasitoses produced by arthropods (pediculosis, scabies, tungiasis, myiasis), passing progressively to hemaphagous arthropods (mosquitoes, gnats, horse flies, bedbugs, ticks), venomous arthropods (Latrodectus spiders, scorpions, wasps, bees), mechanical vectors (flies and cockroaches), culminating with a conjunction of bucolic arthropods (butterflies, crickets, grasshoppers cicadas, ants, centipedes, beetles, glow worms, dragonflies)." --Scopus
Emil Volek discusses José Marti's work and the evolution of Mocondo and magical realism in Latin American literature. The article evaluates, among other aspects, the influence of authors such as Gabriel García Márquez on the establishment of magical realism.
"Using the analysis applied to a short fragment of the novel One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez as a basis, the author proposes to expose the elements which constitute the process of paternalization (knowledge, bisexuality, narcissism, Œdipal complex, identifications, parricide, the earth, woman and negative work). In conclusion, the author proposes several hypotheses concerning possible extensions of the concept of filiation."--Scopus
Juan Ángel Juristo examines the role of women in Spanish fiction. he discusses the increasing role women play in the politics, social dynamics, and economy of Spain. Juristo comments on the style of various authors and analyzes differences between Gabriel García Márquez and other prominent writers.
Ortega discusses the history of Cervantes' Don Quixote and the role of alternative spaces and locations in relation to the novel. He comments on Gabriel García Márquez' view that the climate in the valley is fresh and that people do not sleep in Cartagena to see the dawn of the Caribbean world.
New York, NY : Casa de las Españas, Columbia University
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
58(1/2) : pp. 175-184
Notes:
Earle studies the role of memory and imagination in Latin American nations. He focuses many influential and cultural factors including the works of Gabriel García Márquez.
Opinion. Comments on the ways that the fiction in the book, `One Hundred Years of Solitude,' was accepted as history, with reference to a television interview with Nobel Prize-winner Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Reaction of literary critics and historians to Garcia Marquez's rendition of the events during the strike that took place in Colombia during 1928; Examination of the repressive nature of the Colombian regime and of the strike.
London, UK : Routledge for the Institute of Psycho-Analysis
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
79(2) : pp. 317-331
Notes:
In this paper the author discusses the situation of children handed over to grandparents or to other relatives of the natural parents to be brought up. She notes that such children are faced with the riddle of their own filiation and postulates that this scenario often conceals an oedipal fantasy to the effect that the child concerned is the fruit of an incestuous relationship between a grandparent and the relevant parent. Following the example of Freud, the author adduces literary models for illustration. As with the Oedipus of Sophocles, the author shows how efforts to thwart the workings of fate actually bring about the consummation of the tragedy in the form of incest, which is favoured by the confused oedipal configuration in the families of handed-over children. The main argument is based on the characters and situations of two novels by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, written at different times in his life. With reference to the psychoanalytic literature on artistic creativity, the author shows the importance of the mid-life crisis in determining how Garcia Marquez came to terms with the fact of having himself been entrusted to grandparents as a child and how this situation is reflected in the works concerned.-- Scopus
"The article presents several lists of books related to Spanish literature featured in the publications of John Butt including "Writers and Politics in Modern Spain," by Hodder and Stoughton, 'Miguel de Unamuno: San Miguel Bueno, 'San Manuel Bueno, mártir,' by Grant and Cutler, 'A New Reference Grammar of Modern Spanish,' by Edward Arnold", and 'The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor,' by Gabriel García Márquez.
Méndez analyzes the works of Gabriel García Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, and Pablo Neruda. He takes into account their impact as writers and their role in creating works of historical significance.
Hart studies and analyzes Simón Bolívar. He studies his impact in Latin America and provides biographical and informational data. The end of the article details information on Bolívar's portrayal in García Márquez' work El general en su laberinto.
Philip Swanson analyzes Isabel Allende and her work, "La Casa de los Espíritus." In the article, Swanson notes the similarities between Allende's work and the work of García Márquez, particularly in "Cien Años de Soledad." Swanson states that the work of Allende is considered an "invert" of García Márquez rather than an "imitation" of it.
Chile : Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Instituto de Letras
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Library, University of Illinois
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36 : pp. 177-186
Notes:
Macarena Areco writes about the rise of the hybrid novel in Spain and Latin America. In the article, Ignacio Padilla speaks about the Boom writers, including García Márquez.
Rodero states: "The fantastic represents a constant in Latin American narrative of the 20th Century. This article analyzes the presence and evolution of this narrative mode in Latin American literature through the study of four short stories, each representing a different literary trend: the ‘modernismo’ of marvelous tone (‘El ángel caído,’ Amado Nervo), the demystifying magical realism (‘Un señor muy viejo con unas alas enormes,’ Gabriel García Márquez), the transgressive post-boom (‘El ángel caído,’ Cristina Peri Rossi), and the feminist post-modernism (‘Moraleja para ángeles,’ Sonia González Valdenegro). The main theories on the fantastic are reviewed and used in the particular analysis of the short stories: from the classic distinction established by Todorov between the marvelous, the uncanny, and the fantastic to the most recent critical studies (Lucie Armitt, Remo Ceserani, etc.), including other decisive and essential contributions such as those by Rosemary Jackson and Irène Bessière."
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"Mestizo y seminal como el continente en que rebrota, el género de la crónica, tan cultivado en tiempos de la conquista y de la colonia en América para dar noticia al emperador Carlos I de España y V de Alemania de los asuntos de Indias, no sólo es relevante por su carácter histórico y su relación con otros géneros, sino tambiénpor ser, como señala Gabriel García Márquez en su discurso de recepción del premio Nobel de literatura, el germen de nuestras novelas de hoy, es decir el origen de lo que sería la principal tendencia artística de las letras hispanoamericanas del siglo XX; el realismo mágico o lo [real maravilloso], como lo denominó su creador, Alejo Carpentier, algunas décadas atrás, término que, a pesar de haberse aplicado indiscriminadamente como rótulo a demasiados novelistas hispanoamericanos, acabó por convertirse en el sello personal del Nobel colombiano."
"Las novelas de Gabriel García Márquez y Augusto Roa Bastos abarcan temas grandes y variados. Con fecuencia sus obras se enfrentan con historias tanto nacionales como continentales, historias latinoamericanas que residen entre el mito y el archivo. 'El otoño del patriarca' (1975) y 'Yo el Supremo' (1974) son novelas del dictador que juegan con el concepto del poder, tratando el poder desde el lado de la impotencia o, másprecisamente, desde el lado de la muerte. En realidad, la muestra de la doble cara del poder es solamente uno de los desdoblamientos que sirve de base estructural y temática de estas dos obras en las que cada elemento se transforma en su contrario: la vida en la muerte, la muerte en la vida, el gran ditador en ser miserable y solitario, y el héroe en traidor. Cada una de las dos obras ocupa el lugar entre dos muertes, y es interesante notar también que cada dictador tiene su doble--o dobles. Es como si el dictador tuviera dos cuerpos, uno natural y sujeto a las leyes de la biología y otro de otra sustancia, quizás sublime o sobrenatural, que perduraría en el tiempo, o por lo menos dentro de los límites de la narrativa. En este ensayo propongo explorar a fondo las relaciones entre el cuerpo y el poder del dictador." (From article)
"'All the great writers have good eyes' is a sentence by V. Nabokov that is very suitable for G.G. Márquez and his One Hundred Years of Solitude. The novel, published in 1967, introduces among many others, the character of little Rebeca, whose frailness and greenish skin revealed hunger 'that was older than she was'. The girl, because of a pica syndrome, only liked to eat earth and the cake of whitewash. But her fate appears to be determined by the lethal insomnia plague, whose most fearsome part was not the impossibility of sleeping but its inexorable evolution toward a loss of memory in which the sick person 'sinks into a kind of idiocy that had no past'. Rebeca's lethal insomnia looks quite similar to the 'peculiar, fatal disorder of sleep' originally described by Lugaresi et al. in 1986. One Hundred Years of Solitude shows that G.G. Márquez was gifted not only with good eyes, but has the seductive power of changing reality into fantasy, while transforming his visions into reality."-- Scopus
Detwiler says of Crónica de una muerte anunciada, "a short narrative by perhaps the most famous of the Boom writers, García Márquez's 1981 work dismantles the steps involved in producing an eyewitness account of a past event...[and] equates the production of eyewitness testimony with the act of making fiction."
This entire issue is dedicated to Gabriel García Márquez. It includes articles from the following authors: Teodosio Fernández, Lorena E. Roses, Ana Gallego Cuñas, Alvaro Salvador, Julio Ortega, José Miguel Oviedo, Anibal González, Jacques Joset, José Manuel Camacho, Angel Esteban and Juan Gustavo Cobo Borda. All of the articles are included in this bibliography.
"El canon literario por su parte ha venido idealizando la mujer en su imaginidad pureza mientras que al mismo tiempo la margina y demoniza cuando no se subordina a la autoridad masculina. No ocurre esto, sin embargo, en 'Cien años de soledad. A pesar de que la crítica ha venido afirmando que se puede clasificar a los personajes femeninos según la dictomía citada, un relectura a la luz tanto de la teología feminista como de la mitología potencia una interpretación mucho más matizada."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 9-12
Notes:
"Uno de los rasgos más característicos de la obra de Gabriel García Márquez - y de los menos comentados - es su extraño recorrido inverso. Normalmente, la trayectoria de un escritor suele ir desde un periodo inicial, de aprendizaje e imitación en el que se practican ciertos modelos literarios establecidos y se homenajea a los grandes maestros de la tradición, hasta un momento de madurez en el que, poco a poco, y habitualmente con lentitud y dudas, el autor contruye su propio mundo. En el caso del maestro colombiano, como digo, el recorrido ha sido el inverso, García Márquez inicia su trayectoria literaria con la obsesión por la construcción de un mundo, el mundo mítico de Macondo, y a esa obsesión están dedicadas sus primeras obras, 'La Hojarasca,' 'El coronel no tiene quien le escriba,' 'Los funerales de la Mamá Grande,' 'La mala Hora'..., hasta conseguir recrearlo en su obra maestra 'Cien años de soledad.'"
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 12-15
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"En 'Del amor y otros demonios' (1994) Gabriel García Márquez parecía confiar en lectores a los que la lectura pone al borde del llanto. Se diría que así como anteriormente había escrito novelas que lo esperaban casi todo de la risa, de la crítica o de la nostalgia, ésta nos convoca a llorar."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 15-16
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"Que un hombre conciba el plan de reglarse a sí mismo, en la víspera de sus noventa años, una noche de placer con una joven virgen suena como algo del todo imposible, aparte de ridículo, pero en las manos de Gabriel García Márquez esa delirante fantasía erotica se convierte, no solo en una situación plausible, sino también en una historia conmovedora y llena de una delicada y profunda sabiduría humana."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 16-18
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"A lo largo de la extensa obra de Gabriel García Márquez el tema amoroso se has hecho presente de manera cada vez más significativa, desde los [amores difíciles] que, entre muchos otros cataclismos, sufren los personajes de 'Cien años de soledad' (1967), hasta los no menos arduos amores que ocupan el centro de las tres novelas que el maestro colombiano ha dedicado con exclusividad a ese tema: 'Cronica de una muerte anunciada' (1981), 'El amor en los tiempos de cholera' (1985), y 'Del amor y otros demonios' (1994)."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 19-21
Notes:
"Consabido es que el Tiempo constituye el núcleo duro de la semántica de as ficciones de Gabriel García Márquez, incluso en las memorias del protagonista nonagenario de su última novela publicada. Tan evidentes son dos temáticas que se injertan en el tronco de Cronos y cruzan casi todos los textos del imaginación del Nobel colombiano: los amores difíciles y el Poder."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 21-24
Notes:
"García Márquez descubrió a Sófocles en los años cincuenta, de la mano de sus compañeros cartageneros y muy especialmented de su amigo Gustavo Ibarra Merlano -Catedrático de griego-, quien fue uno de los primeros en leer el manuscrito de 'La hojarasca' y en señalar su extraordinario parecido con la 'Antígona' de Sófocles."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 24-26
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"Lo que más eleva al hombre por encima de cualquier ser es la capacidad para traer constantemente al recuerdo, y hacer vivas, las experiencias pasadas, o bien inventarlas. García Márquez es consciente de ello y por eso decidió, desde muy joven, dedicar su vida a contar."
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A.
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 27
Notes:
"No se necesita ver y palpar una tierra para amarla sin remedio. Basta con imaginarla, a través de la buena literatura que García Márquez leyó antes de llegar a ella. La imaginación literaria parece llegar antes que los propios pies."
Jeffrey Lamb analyzes and reviews Humberto Crosthwaite's novel, El Gran Pretender. In the critical essay he discusses how Crosthwaite is "the product of a university education that presented canonical writers from both Mexico and Latin America, including those of the "Boom": Julio Cortazar, Mario Vargas Llosa, Carlos Fuentes, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez."
United States : The Catholic University of America
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Library, University of Illinois
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61(3) : pp. 526-527
Notes:
Gerald Martin reviews "The Twentieth-Century Spanish American Novel" by Raymond Leslie Williams. He critiques the work of Williams, who has written works on authors such as Gabriel García Márquez and Carlos Fuentes. The novel, written by Williams, studies the entirety of twentieth century Spanish American Fiction from 1900-1999.
Carrillo analyzes the essay "Latitud de la flor" by Hispanic writer, philosopher, and politician Mario Prayeras. Carrillo also notes that much of his writing resonates voices of other writers, including Gabriel García Márquez, who worked in virgin territories that opposed the modern logic of the state.
Madrid, Spain : Insula, Librería, Ediciones y Publicaciones, S.A
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Library, University of Illinois
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62(723) : pp. 28
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"'Soy escritor por timidez. Mi verdadera vocación es la del prestidigitador, pero me ofusco tanto tratando de hacer un truco, que he tenido que refugiarme en la soledad de la literatura.' Estas palabras perpetadas por el Nobel como un acto mismo de timidez, revelan muchas mentiras."
This two volume set is composed of notes and papers presented in a conference on literature held from August 4-8, 1997 in Quito. This article talks about three of Gabriel García Márquez's books. The author states "'El otoño del patriarca,' 'El Coronel no tiene quien le escriba,' y 'El General en su laberinto,' son muestra de una literatura que alegoriza esos 'dias de gloria' y sintetiza todo un proceso histórico a partir del relato ficcional que encubre una 'verdadera historia no contada' - sustituida como el continente mismo- y abre la posibilidad desde la perspectiva del ocaso del poder para una interpretación no explícita."
**This article also appears in the journal "Cuadernos Americanos: Nueva Epoca (2000). Vol. 2 Issue: 104 Pages: 43-56.
This article discusses Gabriel García Márquez's interpretation of reality. The author states "Gabriel García Márquez's fiction transports readers to a world between reality and imagination."