1. Cataclysm: 1 : flood, deluge
2 : catastrophe 3a
3 : a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition; broadly : an event that brings great changes.
-Merriam-Webster Online.
P 305: "A seismic voice, a volcanic breath, the roar of a cataclysm broke out in the center of the crowd with a great potential of expansion."
2. After Fernanda's attack of Mauricio, Meme stops talking altoghether. Fernanada sends her to a convent in her hometown, and in her sorrow, Meme never protests. She never gets over Mauricio, however, and spends her remaining days pining for her lost love. While in the convent, Meme gives birth to Mauicio's child, who is named Aureliano (II), and Fernanda hides the child in Aureliano's workshop, claiming that she found him in a basket. Jose Arcadio Segundo helps with the banana plantation's worker's strike protesting poor working conditions, and when the government asks for a meeting of all of the workers, they believe their protests have been heard. The meeting is a trick, however, and the government massacres all attendees, shipping the bodies off silently in the night and dumping them into the sea. Jose Arcadio Segundo is the lone survivor, and despite his efforts, the rest of the town believes he imagined the incident. It begins to rain, a rain that lasts four years and virtually destroys Macondo. The government comes looking for Jose Arcadio Segundo, but as he hides in Melquiades's room, the search party looks right over him, seeing the decay around him but not Jose Arcadio Segundo himself. He then shuts himself up in Melquiades's room, studying the texts of the gypsy and making little to no human contact. Aureliano Segundo, meanwhile, loses his affinity for the extravagent. His fortune is diminished because of the rain, but he devotes much of his time to trying to find the treasure from the statue of Saint Joseph. Ursula's health deteriorates even farther, and Aureliano (II) escapes from his seclusion in Aureliano's workshop.
3. I got the feeling that Meme's lost love and then return to Fernanda's convent was kind of circular, drawing a comparison to the life Fernanda lived and escaped from. However, things happened backwards for Meme. She found love, but had it ripped away from her, and in her misery she was forced to move to the convent, where she spent the rest of her life in a state of melancholy reflection. She in a sense fulfilled her mother's destiny, which was changed when Aureliano Segundo came and took her away. Had he not done so, she likely would have spent the remainder of her life in the convent, pining for wealth and affluence. It's almost as if the two women shared a fate, each carrying part of the burden. In this way, it's as if the life comes full circle, with the latter generation finally finishing what was started by the first. Jose Arcadio Segundo echoes the life of Colonel Aureliano Buendia, as he rises to power supporting the less fortunate and eventually crossing the government. After the massacre, he locks himself up in solitude, again mirroring Aureliano. Even Ursula seems to notice this, as she proclaims that, "It's as if the world were repeating itself." Magical realism is very strong in this section, as the massacre, which seems absolutely ludicrous, is more real than the flying carpets and mystic gypsies of earlier in the tale. Why would a government wipe out three thousand of its own people? It seems like a horrifying fiction to imagine a whole town able to deny such occurrances, yet this event is based in reality. This idea really makes one question what reality is, as well. If a whole town denies that an event happens, did it happen? If nobody remembers, or recognizes, something as reality, is it really reality? Jose Arcadio Segundo is the only one who knows what happened the night of the massacre, yet nobody believes him. To the other citizens of Macondo, he is the one telling falsities, while they "know" the truth. This is applicable in life outside of the novel, as well. Reality is really decided by what the majority think or choose to remember. The rain that makes its appearance in this section reminds me of the forty-day flood in the Bible. In the Bible, the flood erases everything from earth, with the exception of Noah and two of each kind of animal. In a way, this is what's happening in Macondo; although everything does not disappear, much is destroyed, and only a few of Aureliano's animals live. It's almost as if God is punishing the people for their excessive materialism, as well as cleansing the town after the massacre.
4. Will Fernanda ever repent for the way she treated her children and her husband? Will she bring Meme home, or will Meme die alone in the convent? Will Fernanda accept Aureliano (II)?
Who are the "invisible" doctors Fernanda keeps consulting? I do not understand this storyline at all... are they real doctors? Are they in her imagination? What's going on?
Will Macondo ever return to its former glory? After the rains nearly demolish the town, is a recovery even possible?
Friday, April 9, 2010
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Who are the "invisible" doctors Fernanda keeps consulting? I do not understand this storyline at all... are they real doctors? Are they in her imagination? What's going on?
ReplyDeleteWE DON'T KNOW EITHER ALDKFJL;KAEJL;AJLJA >:0 SOMEONE NEEDS TO FIND MARQUEZ AND ASK THAT MAN A FEW QUESTIONS.
I think that your analysis of this book is excellent. I also read this book for my english class, and I didn't really enjoy it, but after reading some of your sections, I was able to appreciate the novel more.
ReplyDeleteI love One Hundred of Solitude. Thank for sharing for me.
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