Blogs

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.


Week 6: Revolution of Ideas in Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World

Posted by: samuel wallace

    Primarily, Alejo Carpentier’s “The Kingdom of This World” is a book which surrounds itself with themes of conflict. Through portraying the violence that slave revolts might bring, as well as comparing it to the actual trauma that comes through the Haitian slave trade, it mirrors the internal struggle of ideology inherent in its […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Carpentier
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week6. pedro páramo

Posted by: jasmine

week6. pedro páramo – As someone who previously didn’t know much about magical realism at all, I think Pedro Páramo was the best first impression I could have been given. Though I did read 100 Years of Solitude previously, I have to be honest and say I don’t remember a lot of it. Probably because I […] read full post >>
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Week 6 – Pedro Paramo

Posted by: Daisy

This was an interesting read. After being left in much confusion from last week's reading, it was definitely nice to have an idea as to what was going on at the end of the page, not to say that it wasn't challenging in its own way however. I tend to ha... read full post >>
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Week 6 – Pedro Paramo

Posted by: Daisy

This was an interesting read. After being left in much confusion from last week's reading, it was definitely nice to have an idea as to what was going on at the end of the page, not to say that it wasn't challenging in its own way however. I tend to ha... read full post >>
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Week 6: "Pedro Páramo" (Rulfo)

Posted by: Jordan Clarke

 Hi everyone! I hope everyone is surviving their midterms! I have to say I rather enjoyed this book. I am a big believer in ghosts, spirits, and honestly anything supernatural. That being said, I haven't read or watched many interpretations of gho... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
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Week 6: "Pedro Páramo" (Rulfo)

Posted by: Jordan Clarke

 Hi everyone! I hope everyone is surviving their midterms! I have to say I rather enjoyed this book. I am a big believer in ghosts, spirits, and honestly anything supernatural. That being said, I haven't read or watched many interpretations of gho... read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
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Pedro Parámo

Posted by: Shade Wong

Juan Rulfo’s Pedro Parámo employed a non-linear storytelling structure that weaves together past and present timelines of Comala, as seen from the perspectives of various characters, predominantly Juan and Pedro. Though the structure can be perplexing, the theme of timelessness was one aspect that I appreciated about the book, which I believe serves to emphasize […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Rulfo
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Week 6 – Pedro Paramo

Posted by: KenwardTran

Hey everyone, This week’s reading was a little better to analyze than last week’s Labyrinth. I enjoyed Juan Rulfo’s use of memory in the novel and allowed us to focus on how powerful it can be. The use of memory alongside death were quite strong in the novel and. The dead residents of Comala are […] read full post >>
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Alejo Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World (Week 6)

Posted by: benjamin ranieri

Overall, I found that I enjoyed Alejo Carpentier’s novel, The Kingdom of This World, the most out of any text we have read so far this term. Not necessarily for any definable reason, although my cynical side wants to say I liked it because it was short. Regardless, it was interesting to read about Latin […] read full post >>
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The Kingdom of This World

Posted by: FelixMcNally

I found the structure of this book to be similar to Azuela’s The Underdogs, following the same progressive story split by short chapters. Carpentier’s The Kingdom of This World, though, has titled chapters that I found excellently highlighted the topic of each part. Whether it was utilized for foreshadowing or emphasizing a relevant phrase, the […] read full post >>
Posted in: Blogs, Carpentier
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