Please use categories and/or tags when writing your blog posts. Use categories to indicate the author (e.g. Azuela or García Márquez etc.), and tags for key concepts or topics covered. Remember also to include a question for discussion.
Thought 9: A Tale of Some Horny Soldiers
Posted by: Curtis
Hi all, This week we discuss Captain Pantoja and the Special Service, paying homage to the increasing demand for specialists (aka lust), the ridiculous professionalism/euphemisms of bureaucratic systems, and the racial depiction of Chino Porfirio. Question: What do you think is the role of the Brothers of the Ark in this story? Is there an … read full post >>
The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector (Week 9)
Posted by: julia moniz-lecce
This book begins with one of the best opening lines I have read: "all the world began with a yes" (1). With this first line, Lispector introduces the perspectives of open-mindness, macro-thinking, and positivity required to read this novel. I also thin... read full post >>
The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector (Week 9)
Posted by: julia moniz-lecce
This book begins with one of the best opening lines I have read: "all the world began with a yes" (1). With this first line, Lispector introduces the perspectives of open-mindness, macro-thinking, and positivity required to read this novel. I also thin... read full post >>
The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector (Week 9)
Posted by: julia moniz-lecce
This book begins with one of the best opening lines I have read: "all the world began with a yes" (1). With this first line, Lispector introduces the perspectives of open-mindness, macro-thinking, and positivity required to read this novel. I also thin... read full post >>
One Hundred Years of Solitude – Part 2
Posted by: laura halcrow
After finishing One Hundred Years of Solitude, I was left amazed at how much Garcia Marquez was able to fit into the novel. Not only where there seven generations packed into this book, but each generation had meaning and characterization, and there was plot points surrounding all the characters we meant. Of course, the importance […] read full post >>
Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years II
Posted by: diana
In the later part of Gabriel García Márquez’s’ “One Hundred Years of Solitude”, we see the once simple town of Macondo struggle with disruptions brought over by the shiny new train. This comes in the form of modernization and capitalism which begins to take over with the start of industry in the banana plantation and …
Continue reading "Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years II"
read full post >>Week 9: One Hundred Years of Solitude II
Posted by: Mai N
At the start of the novel, reading about the quaint, utopian Macondo that got excited over things like magnets and telescopes, I could predict that the outside world was about to change this quickly and for the worse - technology and organized re... read full post >>
Week 9: One Hundred Years of Solitude II
Posted by: Mai N
At the start of the novel, reading about the quaint, utopian Macondo that got excited over things like magnets and telescopes, I could predict that the outside world was about to change this quickly and for the worse - technology and organized re... read full post >>
100 Years of Today’s Yesterdays
Posted by: Clandestino
This book written by Garcia Marquez has left a certain hole in my pupil, one that looks backwards to my own history and that of my family’s. Though, I can argue that that hole was already there, I can also confess that it has and is always being shaded with some type of filter. Seldom […] read full post >>
week 9: One Hundred Years of Solitude pt.2
Posted by: KD
To partly respond to the question posed in the lecture video, "Is this inevitable.... does history here have to mean deterioration and decay?" I have a rather abstract idea to propose. I do not believe Macondo's history would always have to end in dete... read full post >>