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Gene H. Bell-Villada - García Márquez: the man and his work

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Gabriel Garcia Marquez is one of the most influential Latin American writers of the twentieth century. His unique literary creativity is rooted in the history of the region, with all its social and political implications.In this beautifully written examination of Garcia Marquez and his work, Gene Bell-Villada traces the major forces that have shaped the Colombian novelist and describes his life, his personality, and his political opinions. He considers Garcia Marquezs place in world literature and analyzes his short fiction and all of his novels from the great and complex One Hundred Years of Solitudea cultural phenomenon the likes of which we have seldom seenthrough Love in the Time of Cholera. He shows why Garcia Marquez has achieved a confluence of high art and popular success that is virtually unique in the twentieth century.Bell-Villada examines the narrative works of Garcia Marquez for their historical and human content, for their literary technique and structure, and for their expert use of fantasy, ribaldry, humor, and satire. He describes Garcia Marquez as a global phenomenon and as a local boy, as a Nobel Laureate and as a Latin American Everyman, as a political writer and as a novelist of love.The book will appeal to a broad spectrum of readersgeneralists who enjoy his novels, teachers and students, and literary specialists and Latin Americanists investigating the culture and politics of the region.

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title Garca Mrquez The Man and His Work author Bell-Villada - photo 1

title:Garca Mrquez : The Man and His Work
author:Bell-Villada, Gene H.
publisher:University of North Carolina Press
isbn10 | asin:0807842648
print isbn13:9780807842645
ebook isbn13:9780807860335
language:English
subjectGarca Mrquez, Gabriel,--1928- , Authors, Colombian--20th century--Biography.
publication date:1990
lcc:PQ8180.17Z594 1990eb
ddc:863
subject:Garca Mrquez, Gabriel,--1928- , Authors, Colombian--20th century--Biography.
Page iii
Garca Mrquez
The Man and His Work
Gene H. Bell-Villada
The University of North Carolina Press
Chapel Hill & London
Page iv
1990 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bell-Villada, Gene H., 1941
Garca Mrquez: the man and his work / by Gene H. Bell-Villada.
p. cm.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-8078-1875-5 (alk. paper).ISBN 0-8078-4264-8 (pbk.:
alk. paper)
1. Garca Mrquez, Gabriel, 1928 . 2. Authors, Colombian20th
centuryBiography. I. Title.
PQ8180.17.A73Z594 1990
863dc20
[B] 89-16474
CIP
Portions of Chapter 1 appeared originally as part of "Gabriel Garca Mrquez: Special Issue," in Latin American Literary Review 13, no. 25 (JanuaryJune 1985). Reprinted with permission.
An earlier version of Chapter 9 appeared in Contemporary Literature 28, no. 4 (Winter 1987). Reprinted with permission.
Brief quotations from Elizabeth Wyckoff's translation of Sophocles' Antigone and from the David Grene translation of Oedipus the King, both in The Complete Greek Tragedies, vol. 1, edited by Richmond Lattimore and David Grene, are reprinted by permission of the University of Chicago Press.
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Manufactured in the United States of America
03 02 01 00 99 9 8 7 6 5
Design by April Leidig-Higgins
Page v
To
Carmen Villada Romero
(in memoriam, 19191984)
and Estevan Romero,
for many years of good parenting
Page vii
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
ix
A Note on the Text
xiii
Abbreviations
xv
Part One: Backgrounds
1
The Novel
3
2
The Country
16
3
The Writer's Life
42
4
The Man and His Politics
62
5
The Readings
69
Part Two: Works
6
The History of Macondo
93
7
The Master of Short Forms
119
8
Juvenilia and Apprenticeship (A Brief Interlude)
139
9
The Anatomy of Tyranny
149
10
The Novelist of Love
176
11
The Legacy
203
Notes
211
Select Bibliography
221
Index
239

Page ix
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I wish to extend my sincerest thanks to all who have aided in making this book possible. The earliest ideas I ever entertained about Garca Mrquez were first heeded and encouraged in the 1970s by Enrique Anderson-Imbert and by the late Raimundo Lida, both of Harvard University. At different times over the years, insights and information and other forms of help have been furnished by Ronald Christ of Rutgers University; by Gregory Kolovakos of the New York State Council on the Arts; by Eduardo Camacho of Middlebury College in Madrid; by Marjorie Agosn of Wellesley College; by Thomas Smiley of Albuquerque, New Mexico; by many a good student in my literary courses at Williams College; and by Professors Antonio Gimnez, Norman Petersen, and John Stambaugh, colleagues there.
Certain initial portions of the current study were read by Gustavo Meja of the Vassar-Wesleyan Program in Madrid, and by my wife Audrey Dobek-Bell; their support and corrective details have proved extremely useful. Raymond L. Williams of Washington University, Katheleen Newman of Syracuse University, Randall Hansys of North Adams State College, and Lorraine Roses and Joy Renjilian-Burgy of Wellesley College all kindly offered opportunities to rehearse some of my ideas in open forum. In the days when this project was still in its first stages of research, Nicholas Bromell of Boston Review and Chinweizu of South: The Third World Magazine allowed me a printed venue for my report on Colombia and my chat with Garca Mrquez. Charles Rossman of the University of Texas, in his capacity as guest editor at Latin American Literary Review and at
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