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2 Cien años de soledad and the Macondo Cycle

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A Companion to Gabriel García Márquez
This chapter is in the book A Companion to Gabriel García Márquez
2Cien años de soledadand the Macondo CycleGarcía Márquez is best known for his novel Cien años de soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude). This was the centerpiece of his writing career when he was awarded the Nobel prize for Literature in 1982. This novel was the culmination of the ‘cycle of Macondo’ fictions that García Márquez began constructing in the early 1950s and continued to elaborate, in short fictions and novels, until 1967. What is exceptional in this novel is its unique combination of seemingly incongruous elements, for it is both traditional and modern, at the same time modern and postmodern, and also heavily indebted to the traditions of both oral and written cultures. The synthesis of these seemingly opposite elements invites the reader to question the binary thinking typically used to discuss literature. The Macondo fictions that preceded this novel – La hojarasca (Leafstorm, 1955), El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (No One Writes to the Colonel, 1961), La mala hora (In Evil Hour, 1962), Los funerales de la mamá grande (1962, with its cover story translated in No One Writes to the Colonel and Other Stories under the title Big Mama’s funeral) – are also the subject of this chapter.García Márquez has become widely celebrated for his creative imagina-tion, for his commitment to progressive social change in Latin America, and, for better or for worse, as the paradigmatic ‘magic realist’ author.1 Writing under the tutelage of a group of intellectuals recently identified as the Group of Cartagena, he began the creation of Macondo in Cartagena during the years 1948 and 1949. He completed the first Macondo novel, La hojarasca, in Barranquilla while in dialogue with his friends of the Group of Barranquilla; it appeared in print in 1955. According to Oscar de la Espriella, one of his friends from Cartagena, the young García Márquez did not seem to fit among 1Magic realism can be defined, in the simplest of terms, as a writing style in which the author blends elements of the rational world of empirical reality with elements of the irrational world of fantasy. When Latin American writers use this style and the irrational elements tend toward the exotic, the writing is often described as ‘magic realism’.
© 2010, Boydell and Brewer

2Cien años de soledadand the Macondo CycleGarcía Márquez is best known for his novel Cien años de soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude). This was the centerpiece of his writing career when he was awarded the Nobel prize for Literature in 1982. This novel was the culmination of the ‘cycle of Macondo’ fictions that García Márquez began constructing in the early 1950s and continued to elaborate, in short fictions and novels, until 1967. What is exceptional in this novel is its unique combination of seemingly incongruous elements, for it is both traditional and modern, at the same time modern and postmodern, and also heavily indebted to the traditions of both oral and written cultures. The synthesis of these seemingly opposite elements invites the reader to question the binary thinking typically used to discuss literature. The Macondo fictions that preceded this novel – La hojarasca (Leafstorm, 1955), El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (No One Writes to the Colonel, 1961), La mala hora (In Evil Hour, 1962), Los funerales de la mamá grande (1962, with its cover story translated in No One Writes to the Colonel and Other Stories under the title Big Mama’s funeral) – are also the subject of this chapter.García Márquez has become widely celebrated for his creative imagina-tion, for his commitment to progressive social change in Latin America, and, for better or for worse, as the paradigmatic ‘magic realist’ author.1 Writing under the tutelage of a group of intellectuals recently identified as the Group of Cartagena, he began the creation of Macondo in Cartagena during the years 1948 and 1949. He completed the first Macondo novel, La hojarasca, in Barranquilla while in dialogue with his friends of the Group of Barranquilla; it appeared in print in 1955. According to Oscar de la Espriella, one of his friends from Cartagena, the young García Márquez did not seem to fit among 1Magic realism can be defined, in the simplest of terms, as a writing style in which the author blends elements of the rational world of empirical reality with elements of the irrational world of fantasy. When Latin American writers use this style and the irrational elements tend toward the exotic, the writing is often described as ‘magic realism’.
© 2010, Boydell and Brewer
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