Showing posts with label post-boom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post-boom. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

La casa de los espíritus (1982) – Isabel Allende



Sobre la autora y la obra
-          Allende
o   Chile, 1942-present
o   Rapidly published several best-selling novels (Franco 342)
o   Interest in sexual and political violence (Franco 342)
o   Some influence of magical realism
-          This is her first novel
-          Key work of the post-boom
-          This work is often seen as a sort of critical and feminine re-working of García Márquez’s Cien años de soledad

Comps Example Questions
  1. Metafiction and historiographic metafiction: Borges, Huidobro, Puig, Allende, Sarduy, Valenzuela, Vargas Llosa, etc. Some suggested, secondary readings: Waugh, Hutcheon, Juan-Navarro.
  2. Narrative of dictatorship in the Southern Cone and the guerra sucia. Authors: Puig, Allende, Valenzuela.
3.      Discuss the relationship between Latin American and Latina/o literature by choosing three representative authors/works. For example, similarities and differences between Paz’s Laberinto de la soledad and Anzaldúa’s Borderlands. (Works to consider: Paz, C. Fuentes, García Márquez, Vargas Llosa, Allende, Anzaldúa, J. Álvarez.)
4.      Boom, realismo mágico, and lo real maravilloso; postboom and neobarroco; precursors; modernity (see the “Modernismo since 1940” section of list) and the controversy over postmodernity in Spanish America. Authors: Borges, Huidobro, García Márquez, Rulfo, Carpentier Asturias, Cortázar , Allende, Puig, Sarduy, Fuentes, Poniatowska, Valenzuela. Note: other movements which are associated with some of these writers, such as surrealism (Cortázar) or the use of popular culture and other genres in narrative (Puig), etc. Some suggested, secondary readings: Rodríguez Monegal, Shaw, González Echevarría, Hutcheon.

What Franco says (Chap. 11, pg. 342)
-          Explores and to some extent subverts the gendered separation of public and private
-          Inverts the national allegory mode by portraying strong women protagonists

What Cambridge Latin America says (Chap. 4, pg. 94-95)
-          Key work of the Post-Boom
-          Unmistakable reflection of modern Latin American history, and in particular the modern history of Chile
-          Since it directly reflects modern history, it comments on the evasive nature of the narrative of the Boom
-          Novel is a critical reworking of García Márquez’s Cien años de soledad
-          “Allende’s novel perfectly demonstrates the idea of the Post-Boom as a rearticulation of the Boom while also exhibiting the trend towards greater referentiality that some associate with a Post-Boom proper”

Temas/ideas importantes
-          Estilo de escritura
o   Varied narrative voice: Perspective switches between first person (Esteban) and third person omniscient
-          Influence of the post-boom (experimentalism), magical realism
- Varied narrative voice
--  Largely linear structure (rather than wacky temporality of lots of boom novels)
-   Magical realism – idea of the women having some sort of magical powers/abilities (Clara predicts future, moves sugar bowl with her mind, etc.)
-          Post-modernism
o   Questioning of past reality, historiographic metafiction
-          Metaficción historiográfica
o   Se cuestiona un pasado histórico al mismo tiempo que se recoge una construcción literaria
o   ** should consult Linda Hutcheon’s “The Postmodern Problematizing of History”
o   The story retells the history of a country through its characters, and at the same time we are conscious of what we are reading – it’s a reconstruction of Clara’s notebooks and Esteban’s memories, written by Alba’s pen… we’ve been warned from the beginning that what we are reading is the story of Alba’s family, and also the story of the country (Chile) through the story of her family.
-          Gender
o   Importance of a distinctly female perspective – heavier focus on female characters rather than male ones
o   Idea of the woman as head of household (particularly in Clara)
o   Woman as victim, controlled by men (especially Blanca)
§  Rape, sexual abuse
o   Gender inequality, woman is often inferior in society
-          Turbulent political situation
o   Commentary on current political situation of country (?)
o   Commentary about communism – both for and against
§  Esteban hates communism
o   Conservative party vs. more liberal one, there is a revolution
o   Socialist party wins power, but the country/situation rapidly deteriorates and the militant dictatorship takes over
-          Social class
o   Concern of reputation (upper class)
o   Weakness / lack of power of lower class, particularly in rural region
o   Strong class divide: rich, urban vs. poor, rural
-          Rural vs. urban divide

Main / most important characters
This list is based off Wikipedia; there’s a lot more character analysis there.
-          Clara del Valle Trueba – key female figure in the novel. She is a clairvoyant and telekinetic who is rarely attentive to domestic tasks, but she holds her family together with her love for them and her uncanny predictions
-          Esteban Trueba – central male character of the novel, and along with his granddaughter Alba, is one of the story's main narrators. Clara’s husband
-          Blanca Trueba - Clara and Esteban's first-born daughter; becomes pregnant illegitimately (by Pedro Tercero García) and is forced to marry Count Jean de Satigny, whom she does not love
-          Pedro Tercero García – son of the tenant/foreman of Tres Marías, Pedro Segundo García. Falls in love with Blanca and is the father of her only child, Alba. Revolutionary and songwriter.
-          Alba García – daughter of Blanca and Pedro Tercero García, although for many years of her life she was led to believe that Count de Satigny was her father

Detailed plot summary (from Wikipedia)
The story starts with the del Valle family, focusing upon the youngest and the oldest daughters of the family, Clara and Rosa. The youngest daughter, Clara del Valle, has paranormal powers and keeps a detailed diary of her life. Using her powers, Clara predicts an accidental death in the family. Shortly after this, Clara's green-haired sister, Rosa the Beautiful, is killed by poison intended for her father who is running for the Senate. Rosa's fiancé, a poor miner named Esteban Trueba, is devastated and attempts to mend his broken heart by devoting his life to uplifting his family hacienda, Las Tres Marías. Through a combination of intimidation and reward systems, he quickly earns/forces respect and labor from the fearful peasants and turns Tres Marías into a "model hacienda". He turns the first peasant who spoke to him upon arrival, Pedro Segundo, into his foreman, who quickly becomes the closest thing that Trueba ever has to an actual friend during his life. However, unable to control himself, he rapes many of the peasant women, and his first victim, Pancha García, becomes the mother of his bastard son, who would eventually become Esteban García.
Esteban returns to the city to see his dying mother. After her death, Esteban decides to fulfill her dying wish: for him to marry and have legitimate children. He goes to the del Valle family to ask for Clara's hand in marriage. Clara accepts Esteban's proposal; she herself has predicted her engagement two months prior, speaking for the first time in nine years. During the period of their engagement, Esteban builds what everyone calls "the big house on the corner," a large mansion in the city where the Trueba family will live for generations. After their wedding, Esteban's sister Férula comes to live with the newlyweds in the big house on the corner. Férula develops a strong dedication to Clara, which fulfills her need to serve others. However, Esteban's wild desire to possess Clara and to monopolize her love causes him to throw Férula out of the house. She curses him, telling him that he will shrink in body and soul, and die like a dog. Although she misses her sister-in-law, a passive and dreamy Clara finds happiness in developing her psychic powers. Spirits, artists, and spiritualists flock to the Truebas' house.
Clara gives birth to a daughter named Blanca and later, to twin boys Jaime and Nicolás. The family, which resides in the capital, stays at the hacienda during the summertime. Upon arriving at Tres Marías for the first time, Blanca immediately befriends a young boy named Pedro Tercero, who is the son of her father's foreman. During their teenage years, Blanca and Pedro Tercero eventually become lovers. After an earthquake that destroys part of the hacienda and leaves Esteban injured, the Truebas move permanently to Las Tres Marías. Clara spends her time teaching and helping peasant children, while Blanca is sent to a convent school and the twin boys back to an English boarding school, both of which are located in the city. Blanca fakes an illness so as to be sent back to Las Tres Marías, where she can be with Pedro Tercero. Life runs smoothly until Pedro Tercero is banished from the hacienda by Esteban, on account of his revolutionary communist/socialist ideas.
A visiting French count to the hacienda, Jean de Satigny, reveals Blanca's nightly romps with Pedro Tercero to her father. Esteban furiously goes after his daughter and brutally whips her. When Clara expresses horror at his actions, Esteban slaps her, knocking out her front teeth. Clara decides to never speak to him again, reclaims her maiden name and moves out of Tres Marías and back to the city, taking Blanca with her. Esteban, furious and lonely, blames Pedro Tercero for the whole matter; putting a price on the boy's head with the local corrupt police. At this point, Pedro Segundo deserts Esteban, telling him he does not want to be around when Trueba inevitably catches his son. Enraged by Pedro Segundo's departure, Trueba begins hunting for Pedro Tercero himself, eventually tracking him down to a small shack near his hacienda. He only succeeds in cutting off three of Pedro's fingers, and is filled with regret for his uncontrollable furies.
Jaime becomes an empathetic doctor while crafty Nicolás concocts money-making schemes. The two develop a strange relationship with a woman named Amanda. Nicolas and Amanda are originally introduced to the story together, but split later on due to her pregnancy. Jaime loves Amanda dearly at this point but will never admit to his feelings around her. He agrees to help terminate her pregnancy not because his cowardly brother asked him to, but for the woman he cannot have. Years later Jaime and Amanda meet again and Jaime saves her from near death. Amanda remembers Jaime as the tender doctor and falls in love with him, but he realizes that she is not the same beautiful woman that bewitched him originally. He continues to have a relationship with Amanda though he does not love her.
Blanca finds out she is pregnant with Pedro Tercero's child. Esteban, desperate to save the family honor, gets Blanca to marry the French count by telling her that he has killed Pedro Tercero. At first, Blanca gets along with her new husband, but she leaves him when she discovers his participation in sexual fantasies with the servants. Blanca quietly returns to the Trueba household and names her daughter, who has Rosa's green hair, Alba. Clara predicts that Alba will have a very happy future and good luck. Her future lover, Miguel, happens to watch her birth, as he had been living in the Trueba House with his sister, Amanda. They move out shortly after Alba's birth.
Esteban Trueba eventually moves to the Trueba house in the capital as well, although he continues to spend periods of time in Tres Marías. He becomes isolated from every member of his family except for little Alba, whom he is very fond of. Esteban runs as a senator for the Conservative Party but is nervous about whether or not he will win. Clara speaks to him, through signs, informing him that "those who have always won will win again" - this becomes his motto. Clara then begins to speak to Esteban through signs, although she keeps her promise and never actually speaks to him again. A few years later, Clara dies peacefully and Esteban is overwhelmed with grief.
Alba is a solitary child who enjoys playing make-believe in the basement of the house and painting the walls of her room. Blanca has become very poor since leaving Jean de Satigny's house, getting a small income out of selling pottery and giving pottery classes to mentally handicapped children, and is once again dating Pedro Tercero, now a revolutionary singer/songwriter. Alba and Pedro are fond of each other, but do not know they are father and daughter, although Pedro suspects this. Alba is also fond of her uncles. Nicolás is eventually kicked out by his father, moving, supposedly, to North America.
When she is older, Alba attends a local college where she meets Miguel, now a grown man, and becomes his lover. Miguel is a revolutionary, and out of love for him, Alba involves herself in student protests against the conservative government. After the victory of the People's Party (a socialist movement), Alba celebrates with Miguel.
Fearing a Communist dictatorship, Esteban Trueba and his fellow politicians plan a military coup of the socialist government. However, when the military coup is set into action, the military men relish their power and grow out of control. Esteban's son Jaime is killed by power-driven soldiers along with other supporters of the government. After the coup, people are regularly kidnapped and tortured. Esteban helps Blanca and Pedro Tercero flee to Canada, where the couple finally find their happiness.
The military regime attempts to eliminate all traces of opposition and eventually comes for Alba. She is made the prisoner of Colonel Esteban García, the son of Esteban Trueba and Pancha García's illegitimate son, and therefore grandson to Esteban Trueba. During an earlier visit to the Trueba house, García molests Alba as a child. In pure hatred of her privileged life and eventual inheritance, García tortures Alba repeatedly, looking for information on Miguel. He rapes her, thus completing the cycle that Esteban Trueba put into motion when he raped Pancha García. When Alba loses her will to live, she is visited by Clara's spirit who tells her not to wish for death, since it can easily come, but to wish to live.
Esteban Trueba manages to free Alba with the help of Miguel and Tránsito Soto, an old friend/prostitute from his days as a young man. After helping Alba write their memoir, Esteban Trueba dies in the arms of Alba, accompanied by Clara's spirit; he is smiling, having avoided Férula's prophecy that he will die like a dog. Alba explains that she will not seek vengeance on those who have injured her, suggesting a hope that one day the human cycle of hate and revenge can be broken. Alba writes the book to pass time while she waits for Miguel and for the birth of her child.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Camb. LatinAmer Chap. 4: The Post-Boom novel



“Chapter 4: The Post-Boom novel” – Philip Swanson

Comps people mentioned:
-          Gabriel García Márquez, Cien años de soledad (pg. 85-86)
-          Manuel Puig, El beso de la mujer araña (pg. 87)
-          Mario Vargas Llosa, La tía Julia y el escribidor (pg. 88)
-          Severo Sarduy, De donde son los cantantes (pg. 90)
-          Me llamo Rigoberta Menchú y así me nació la conciencia (pg. 91)
-          Isabel Allende, La casa de los espíritus (pg. 94-95)

Figuring out / consolidating some main ideas:
-          Boom
o   Took place in the 1960s
o   Climactic reaction against the traditional realist and regionalist novel (81)
o   Development of “new novel” (which had been developing over the years, but came to a head here) (82)
o   “finite burst of commercial activity” – concentrated publication and sale of many of these “new novels” [in Europe] (82)
o   Writing style: experimentalism, complexity, fragmentation, tortuousness, tone of universality (83)
-          Post-Boom
o   Began in the late 1960s / early 1970s
o   Reaction against / movement away from / tweaking of the Boom’s “new novel” (85)
o   Incorporation of popular/mass culture (85)
o   Increased interest in social/political reality, the here and now of social/political world (85)
o   More active/visible presence of author (89)
o   Anti-elitist (90)
o   Trend towards readability, structural clarity, sociopolitical commentary, and relative optimism (94)

General notes:
-          Post-Boom = literary developments from the late 1960s and early 1970s onwards (81)
-          There have been some small shifts to indicate a transition from the “boom” to the “post-boom” (81)
o   “A number of major novelists associated with the Boom noticeably develop in a somewhat different direction during and after the seventies”
o   Sense of a break with the sixties
-          Boom was seen as climactic reaction against the traditional realist and regionalist  novel (81)
o   The “new novel” is associated with the boom (82)
-          The term “post-boom” is hazy (82)
o   Sometimes associated with “postmodernism”
o   Post-boom indicates a new attitude towards the experimental new novel associated with the Boom – both a rejection of the New Narrative and a new version of it
o   Post-boom is also associated with the globalization of the Latin American novel
-          The New Novel was an evolving trend since the 1940s or earlier, but the Boom was a “finite burst of commercial activity” (82)
o   The “boom” truly took place in Europe, where lots of publishing (of Latin American novels) was done
-          Boom literary style = experimentalism, complexity, fragmentation, tortuousness (83)
-          Boom was ended by events at a major publishing house and also a major turning point in the Cuban Revolution (83)
o   Turning point: 1971 arrest and humiliation of the Cuban poet Heberto Padilla – “led to a huge rift between Latin American writers and shattered the mirage of the unity of the Boom” (84)
-          Cuban revolution was an important factor in the Boom (83)
o   Cuban revolution made New Novel fashionable, brought Latin America to international public consciousness (84)
o   Mutual faith of the Latin American writers in the Cuban revolution – created a sense of unity (84)
-          “the New Novel’s appeal lay precisely in its shock value… challenging of reader expectations grounded in traditional realism” (84)
-          Rebellion against “new novel” (post-boom) (85)
o   Return to some form of traditional structures
o   Embracing of / engagement with mass or popular culture
o   Increased orientation towards social or political reality
o   Two movements:
§  Emergence of new group of writers (including Manuel Puig)
§  Startling change in direction in the work of already established writers (including Donoso and Vargas Llosa)
-          “Big Four” of the Boom: Cortázar, Fuentes, García Márquez, and Vargas Llosa (85)
-          The big writers of the boom were very different from each other (85)
-          García Márquez’s Cien años de soledad is indicative of transition from boom to post-boom (85)
o   Radical questioning of the nature of reality and literature’s ability to describe it (boom)
o   Tone of pessimism (boom)
o   Largely linear narrative framework (post-boom)
o   Deals with an ordinary rural culture in a down-to-earth way (post-boom)
-          Manuel Puig, El beso de la mujer araña (87)
o   Puig’s most famous, and more explicitly political novel
o   Incorporation of popular mass culture; both praises and criticizes it
o   Brief summary – pg. 87
o   Two protagonists contrast against each other; one represents “serious” culture and the other represents “popular” culture
o   Focus on sexual message: idea that sexual repression is at the heart of all repression
o   Problematizes the relationship between fiction and reality (like a Boom novel in this sense)
-          Mario Vargas Llosa, La tía Julia y el escribidor, 1977 (88)
o   Demonstrative of his transition from Boom to post-Boom
o   Autobiographical coming-of-age story
-          In the post-boom literature, “the new technique of the deliberate foregrounding of authorial machinations actually draws attention to the fictionality of the text and in so doing emphasizes what was really the central contention of the New Novel of the Boom: that reality cannot be faithfully captured by literature” (89)
-          Tension and interplay between Boom and post-Boom (89)
o   Post-Boom re-worked some of Boom’s main ideas
-          Severo Sarduy, De donde son los cantantes, 1967 (90-91)
o   Baroque tone
o   No real narrative in a conventional sense
o   The main characters seek their own meaning, but meaning is endlessly deferred
o   The plot is “dictated by phonetic associations or by the internal logic of language itself”
-          The post-Boom isn’t exactly a complete rejection of the Boom, but rather a new approach to it (91)
-          Emergence of the testimonio and the New Historical Novel between the 1970s and 1990s (91)
o   Both reinforce the impression of a greater emphasis on the direct presentation of social reality
-          Testimonio = “kind of autobiography told by another, usually more educated and narratively gifted, person” (91)
-          Me llamo Rigoberta Menchú y así me nació la conciencia, 1983 (91)
o   Most famous example of a testimonio
o   Provoked many debates about the authenticity of the “testimonio” genre
o   “while testimonio gives voice to the ordinary or marginalized people, it risks setting up the same tensions between presentation and reality that characterized the earlier fiction it seemed to be a reaction against”
-          New Historical Novel
o   Another obvious attempt to recuperate reality, particularly by revisiting certain protagonists of the colonial and independence periods (91)
o   Links history to the unreliability of fiction
-          It’s really difficult to nail down what counts as post-Boom literature; lots of stuff has been labeled that when it probably should have been, so it’s not really a reliable/precise term (93-94)
-          Isabel Allende, La casa de los espíritus, 1982 (94-95)
o   Key work of the Post-Boom
o   Unmistakable reflection of modern Latin American history, and in particular the modern history of Chile
o   Since it directly reflects modern history, it comments on the evasive nature of the narrative of the Boom
o   Novel is a critical reworking of García Márquez’s Cien años de soledad
o   “Allende’s novel perfectly demonstrates the idea of the Post-Boom as a rearticulation of the Boom while also exhibiting the trend towards greater referentiality that some associate with a Post-Boom proper”
-          Several different ways of understanding the Post-Boom (95)
-          “sense that ‘young’ Latin American writers still feel overshadowed by the Boom and still feel a need to respond to it or challenge it” (96)
-          Mexican “generation del Crack” (97)
-          Post-Boom is “above all a state of mind: a state of mind in which a sense of newness is conceived in terms of the past as well as the present and the future” (98)