Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Chronicle of a death foretold :: English Literature:
Chronicle of a death foretold    Chronicle of a death foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is a  fictitious novel. It was originally written in Spanish but was later  translated to English.    The story began on the morning of Santiago Nasarââ¬â¢s murder. We are  being told the story in first person view by an unnamed narrator who  has witness the events that occurred. I think there is a surreal and  repetitive tone; I get the feeling that the narrator is investigating  the murder because we are told the story years later from an  omniscient point of view and all the charactersââ¬â¢ thoughts are shared.    There were two main themes that I noticed. The main theme was how  unpowerful the women are in the story. This is shown when Marquez  writes    "The brothers were brought up to be men. The girls were brought up to  be married.â⬠    This excerpt shows the severity of the lives women lead in the  reserved Colombian culture of the town. A woman's worthiness as a wife  was measured by her beauty in conjunction with her ability to  gracefully run all aspects of a household. The idea that the woman in  a marriage is expected to suffer is significant-no woman enters  marriage expecting to be happiness unless she is fortunate enough to  love whichever man decides to court her. In this Spanish culture,  unlike Western culture, marriage is not based on love.    There is also the importance of cultural traditions like honor. The  twin brothers murder Santiago Nasar because he took their sisterââ¬â¢s  virginity away. Also, I became aware the there in an emphasis on the  dream that Santiago had, with the trees and the weather on the day he  was murdered. Some recalled that it rained and some said that it was  sunny.    One technique used in the story as a motif as magic realism. This is  the incorporation of fantastic or mythical into realistic fiction. I  noticed that Marquez keeps on repeating the murder before it occurred,  this helped to build suspense.    From the second chapter I understood that the narrator implies that  Santiago is innocent for the crime he dies for. But if he is innocent,  then who took Angela Vicarioââ¬â¢s virginity?    The brutality of the social conventions surrounding women becomes  clear in this chapter. Because she was not a virgin when she married,  not only is Angela abandoned by her husband, but she is beaten by her  mother. The double standards of her culture are highlighted by the  fact that the narrator, Santiago and some other friends are all at a  whorehouse doing whatever they please.    This novel reminded me of the difficulty of understanding events.  					    
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