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000 cam
001 2210080499296
005 20050831000000
008 981209s1970 nyu 000 1 eng
019 a7325735
040 aDLCcDLCdOCLd221008
041 aengspa
043 acl-----
050 aPZ4.G2164 b On a PQ8180.17.A73
100 aGarcia M?rquez, Gabriel, d 1928-
240 aCien a?os de soledad. l English
245 00 aOne hundred years of solitude. c Translated from the Spanish by Gregory Rabassa.
250 a[1st ed.]
260 aNew York, b Harper & Row c [1970]
300 a422 p. c 22 cm.
500 00 aTranslation of Cien a?os de soledad.
541 cGift;a김중수 인문과학대학 영문학과 교수;d1997.02.18e(W0126134)
650 aMacondo (Imaginary place) x Fiction.
651 aLatin America x Social conditions x Fiction.
655 aEpic literature. 2 gsafd
950 0 a$7.95
One hundred years of solitude
종류
단행본 서양서
서명
One hundred years of solitude
판 사항
[1st ed.]
발행사항
New York, Harper & Row [1970]
형태사항
422 p 22 cm.
주기사항
Translation of Cien a?os de soledad.

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Garcia M?rquez, Gabriel,
2017-02-08
It took me time and courage to find proper words to write anything on One Hundred Years of Solitude, for Gabriel Garcia Marquez mesmerized me into a tranquility I didn't know how to break. It demands courage and tremendous skill to create and destroy your own creations within 417 pages.    Gabriel Garcia Marquez was born in Aracataca, Columbia in 1927. Influenced by his grandmother's vivid storytelling, Marquez decided at an early age that he wanted to be a writer. Upon completion of la Universidad de Cartagena, Marquez began his career as a reporter and soon began to write short stories. His earliest stories were published as early as the 1950s, yet in 1964 while living in Mexico City with his young family, he completed Solitude in a mere eighteen months. Finally published for the first time in 1967, Solitude sold millions of copies, establishing Marquez as a world renown writer, leading to his receiving the Nobel Prize in 1982.  The prime characters of the book, Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula Iguaran lived in an isolated Colombian village where branches of the same family intermarried for centuries, resulting in children born with pigs tails or looking like lizards. Determined to end this cycle of incest, Buendia and a group of pioneers crossed the mountains and founded the village of Macondo. In the mid 1800s, Macondo was a fledging community, with Buendia, an alchemist, its most respected member. Jose Arcadio and Ursula went on to have three children: Aureliano, Jose Arcadio, and Amaranta. These names and the personality traits that distinguished the original bearers of these names repeated themselves over the course of a century.  Throughout the novel and the century of change to Macondo, all the Jose Arcadios were solitary individuals and inventors. Determined to decipher the gypsies secret to the universe, they holed themselves up in an alchemist's lab, rarely seen by the outside world. The Aurelianos, on the other hand, were leaders of revolution. Colonel Aureliano Buendia started thirty two civil wars yet lost all of them. A relic who fathered seventeen sons of the same name and grew to become Macondo's most respected citizen, his spirit of adventure and discovery repeated itself in the descendants who bore his name.  Women held the family together. First Ursula who lived to be 122 years old and then her daughter Amaranta, the women expanded the family home and raised successive generations so that new Jose Arcadios and Aurelianos would not repeat the mistakes of their namesakes. Yet the same mistakes and characteristics occur: rejected love, spirit of adventure, lone soles willing to live for one hundred years in solitary confinement. Additionally, the two characters who predicted all the events of the novel were not even members of the Buendia family: Pilar Ternera, a card reader who specialized in fates and could look at a Buendia to know his future; and Melquiades, a gypsy who befriended the original Jose Arcadio, leading all the successive generations to a life of solitude.    The points readers can expect to witness by reading this novel are listed as : 1.      A perfect portrayal of how fateful human activity mars the innocent beauty of nature’s creation. It is a human instinct that, the more we discover the more we demand. In this way, we suck into the inescapable cycle of life. 2.      Happiness, solitude and death have connection. At first, Marquez equates solitude with death. Later on he includes individuals happy to live out their days alone. “Death really did not matter to him but life did, and therefore the sensation he felt when they gave their decision was not a feeling of fear but of nostalgia”   3.      Past may be a burden but it is also a great guiding force without which there's no future. The only way to retain your sanity is to remember your history and cling to it. This idea helps in nation building.   4.      Use of metaphor to depict the struggle of a nation, a continent. Here we have a metaphor for the struggle of Maruqez’s native country and continent which is passing through internecine wars on its way toward externally imposed modernity.   5.      The tone of this novel is set ab initio. History gets back in Mocando again and again and every generation is but a repeat of the past. For an instance :
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