dc.creator | Figueroa, Jose Antonio. | en |
dc.date.accessioned | 2012-02-10T16:28:20Z | en |
dc.date.available | 2012-02-10T16:28:20Z | en |
dc.date.created | 2007 | en |
dc.date.issued | 2007 | en |
dc.identifier.other | APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_553237.tar;APT-ETAG: fc4436dc781d6ae1ee324eaee23a28f9 | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10822/553237 | en |
dc.description | Thesis (Ph.D.)--Georgetown University, 2007.; Includes bibliographical
references. In this dissertation I propose a reading of One Hundred years of Solitude in the
context of Garcia Marquez's dialogue with Magical Realism literary movement and the Latin
American sociological thought of the 1970's. These intellectual movements interpret Colombian
peasant struggles. Garcia Marquez critique of cultural artifacts in the Caribbean racial
domination portraits the endogamic structure of Colombian political parties by using the
symbol of incest. In contrast, the liberal party appropriated his work by emphasizing exotic
images of the Caribbean society and described this region as traditional and peaceful while
peasants were in fact rebelling against big landownership and servitude.; By reading Caribbean
novels and ethnographies I trace the conformation of a critical tradition which influences
aesthetics and social thought, and makes public the relation between cultural myths and social
inequalities. In contrast to Alejo Carpentier's image of the Caribbean as a sanctuary where
intellectuals escape from western rationalism, Garcia Marquez introduces a cultural critique
of paternalistic fictions and neocolonialism in the region. These sources show how the moral
economy of the matrilineal family determines power relations.; I illustrate how liberal
intellectuals and literary critics that read in Garcia Marquez's work the portrait of a
regional peasantry liable to traditionalism obscure the fact that during the 1970's this
population headed the most important peasant mobilization of the 20th Century in the search of
land reform and political change in Colombia. The exotizing of the Caribbean peasantry was a
means whereby the Liberal elites rejected the peasant's claims for modernization leading to a
period of political violence. Edward Said's approach to the relation between the text and the
world in colonial and neocolonial societies and ethnographical perspectives from Johannes
Fabian, Adam Kuper, James Fergusson, and Joane Rappaport are used for an interdisciplinary
approach to literature and society in the Colombian Caribbean. | en |
dc.format | application/pdf | en |
dc.language | Text in Spanish, abstract in English | en |
dc.publisher | Georgetown University | en |
dc.source | Dept. of Spanish & Portuguese, Doctoral dissertations, 2007. | en |
dc.subject | Garcia Marquez, Gabriel, 1928- Cien anos de soledad; Garcia Marquez, Gabriel,
1928---Criticism and interpretation; Said, Edward W.; Magic realism (Literature); Spanish
American fiction--20th century--History and criticism; Sociology--Latin America | en |
dc.title | Realismo magico, vallenato y vIolencia politica en el Caribe Colombiano | en |
dc.type | thesis | en |