Viewed on January 15, 2008. |The intertextual dispute has been widely studied by critics of the European and American schools, even though there are several divergent points when it comes to proportioning a concrete denomination, unique and valid in intertextuality.
Washington, DC : Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Location:
Library, University of Illinois
Related Item Details:
21(3) : 130
Notes:
"Focuses on the views of novelist Gabriel García Márquez as written in Press/Politics journal about the pernicious effect of tape recorders on journalism. Advantage of tape recorder on radio interviews, disadvantages of tape recorders in journalism."
"The majority of Gabriel García Márquez's novels and short stories are characterized by the unique coexistence of real and magical features. The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World is no exception. The author reveals through the main character's unexpected appearance on the scene, his giant-like traits, so reminiscent of Johnathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, and his deistically heroic behavior, the magical elements of this short story that remind us of the tales of our childhood. And yet, the very setting in place, the description of the typically Latin American villager's behaviour and the distressing sorrow caused by the protagonist's death, make this masterfully-written literary work as realistic as any other short story in the realistic movement. García Márquez's literary achievement lies precisely in his ability to fuse such divergent characteristics inherent in the magical and realistic movements."
The benefit features Dr. Raul Ruiz Miyares, a professor of Afro-Cuban culture and history at Casa del Caribe, Santiago de Cuba. His lecture, "Cuba & Africanismo: The Making of Revolutionary Culture", will include slides and a video. The benefit also includes: spoken word, an Afro-Cuban folkloric performance, a Caribbean dinner, and a Latin, World Beat dance party, all on Friday, May 2.6 p.m.