Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2002
Published:
Madrid, Spain : Espasa Calpe
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
416
Notes:
Ángel Esteban in collaboration with Raúl Cremades, just published a book that brings together their investigations about sixteen well-known writers of the twentieth century, specifically about their everyday work in the literary creation.
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2004
Published:
Westport, CT : Greenwood Press
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
3, 143-144
Notes:
The authors briefly mention how Mexico has served the purpose of housing people in need such as exiled people or people fleeing oppressive governments. They also mention that there are also people who are not persecuted but still make Mexico their home, such as Gabriel García Márquez.
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2004
Published:
Kindler Verlag, Germany : Polity
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
1, 3, 104, 214, 215, 217, 225, 240, 255, 330,
Notes:
"This is a balanced, carefully researched, and sensitively written look at Fidel Castro and his legacy in Cuba. It shows the warts on thelegacy--- the economic problems, the reluctance to adjust to a changed world-- but it also notes that Castro has brought about an egalitarian society and that he has been true to his revolutionary principles. I have been involved in the Cuban drama since I first arrived in Havana in 1958 as Third Secretary of the old American Embassy. Yet even I learned much from this book. I highly recommend it." -- Wayne S, Smith, the former Chief of the US Interests section in Havana (1979-1982), is now an Adjunct Professor at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and a Senior Associate of the Center for International Policy in Washington, DC. The work refers to García Márquez on listed pages.
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2003
Published:
Lewiston, NY : Edwin Mellen Press
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
29, 82
Notes:
"As a non-realist writer from Spanish America, Borges ended up associated with Gabriel García Márquez and Juan Rulfo, writers both so different in style to Borges and, more important, so very involved in their own local realities, that one wonders whether the people making these comments ever compared these writers at all, or merely assumed a commonality among them based solely on geographical contiguity." (p. 29)
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2002
Published:
Columbia, MO : University of Missouri Press
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
5
Notes:
"Many novels from the 1970s and 1980s demonstrate an awareness of this through intertextuality with the chronicles of conquest and colonization: Mexican Carlos Fuentes's Terra Nostra (1975); Colombian Gabriel García Márquez's El otoño del patriarca (1975), published in translation as The Autumn of the Patriarch; Cuban Alejo Carpentier's El arpa y la sombra (1979), published in translation as The Harp and the Shadow; Colombian Albalucía Ángel's Las andariegas (The wandering women, 1983); Argentine Griselda Gambaro's Lo impenetrable (1984); and Mexican Margo Glantz's Síndrome de naufragios (Shipwreck syndrome, 1984) do not represent linear historical narratives, nor do they deal exclusively with the conquest, but they do draw heavily upon the colonial chronicles in the formation of innovative narratives that transcend particular chronological periods."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2005
Published:
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Instituto de Letras
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
(37) : pp. 23-50
Notes:
Cabezón writes, "el presente estudio se concentrará en la participación protagónica de Gabriel García Márquez, quien con su labor de paladín ha proporcionado suficiente material a la investigación de las interferencias e interdependencias entre la literatura y el cine latinoamericanos."
Secondary source, About García Márquez: The Man, the Reporter, the Writer
Publication Date:
2000
Published:
Stanford, CA : Stanford University Press
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
123-239
Notes:
Nico Israel's essay titled "The place of Salman Rushdie," concentrates on comparing Rushdie's writings to those of García Márquez.||In chapter three, "Outlandish addresses geographical displacement as a lived experience in the twentieth century, as a predicament of writing, and as a problem for theory. It focuses on the work of three transnational writers from diverse backgrounds working in different genres: Joseph Conrad, Theodor W. Adorno, and Salman Rushdie."- Publisher