Gabriel García Márquez Collection

There are 56 records in "Chapters and Sections in Books".
* View your results, starting with records 1 to 10 of 56.

Results by classification


   Next 10 Records

Jump to Records: 1 | 11 | 21 | 31 | 41 | 51


  Record 1 of 56
  AuthorPolley, Krista
  TitleA Comparative Study of the Death of Authority and the Loss of Self in Postmodern Literature
  PublisherUniversity of Alberta
  Publication placeAlberta, Canada
  Publication year2005
  Page
  Volume
  Issue
  Notes(Abstract) "The themes of the death of authority and the loss of self are portrayed in postmodern world literature. Through five culturally specific novels, both the themes of the death of authority and the resulting idea of the loss of self are explored. Gabriel García Márquez, Jerzy Kosinski, Milan Kundera, J.M. Coetzee, and Haruki Murakami provide the novels, each of which presents the postmodern individual living in the world with no sense of authority and no sense of self. These individuals abandon their cultural and social roles in the attempt to find themselves. The individual's situation is understood through the radical theology of kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Altizer and it's relationship to the deconstruction of Derrida and Barthes." (M.A. Thesis)
  URL

  Record 2 of 56
  AuthorLundin, Laura Lee
  Title"An Alternative Reality: Magical Realism in One Hundred Years of Solitude"
  PublisherMidwestern State Universtiy of Witchita Falls Texas
  Publication place Wichita Falls, Texas
  Publication year2003
  Page
  Volume
  Issue
  NotesIncludes bibliographical references. Dissertation: Thesis (M.A.)
  URL

  Record 3 of 56
  AuthorSchoenherr, Julie
  TitleAprobación y desaprobación del honor a la luz de la narratología: Estudio comparativo de
  PublisherUniversity of Ottawa
  Publication placeOttawa, Canada
  Publication year2003
  Page
  Volume
  Issue
  Notes"This thesis examines honour as a central theme in narrative passages of 'El alcalde de Zalamea' a seventeenth-century play by Spain's Pedro Calderon de la Barca, and in 'Cronica de una muerte anunciada' (1981), a short novel by Colombian Gabriel García Márquez. By means of a comparative study, and using narratology as the primary theoretical and methodological frame, this theme is explored through the analysis of both works at three different 'levels'; that of the characters, the narrators, and the implied authors with the intention of revealing the distinct contrast between the ideology expressed at all levels and, ultimately, at the level of the respective implied authors as the embodiment of the works' ideologies, in regards to honour as a socially-regulated code of conduct. An important portion of this analysis is dedicated to discussing the relationship between the fictional components of these works and their symbolic meaning in the external or 'real'/non-fictional world in connection with said ideology."
  URL

  Record 4 of 56
  AuthorSegura, Camila
  TitleAsimilación de un paisaje trágico: Violencia y melodrama en la novela colombiana contemporánea
  PublisherColumbia University
  Publication placeNew York, United States
  Publication year2007
  Page377 p.
  Volume
  Issue
  Notes(Abstract) "Drawing on the work of such theorists as Peter Brooks, James Smith, Christine Gledhill, Linda Williams and Ben Singer, among others, I examine the ways in which some contemporary Colombian novels use violence and melodrama to make sense of the country's social and political turmoil. The historical context of the classic, late 18th century melodrama is comparable to that of contemporary Colombia in that both periods share a generalized feeling of instability, insecurity, and moral ambiguity." and "I also analyze the sociohistorical solutions these novels propose and, considering the incredible publishing success some of them have had, what this suggests in reference to the Colombian imaginaries and their attitudes regarding the State and the Colombian violence. By reading these texts through this unstudied perspective, I bring into focus a new way to read some of the contemporary Colombian novels." Ph.D Dissertation
  URL

  Record 5 of 56
  AuthorMenton, Seymour
  TitleCaminata por la narrativa latinoamericana
  PublisherUniversidad Veracruzana Fondo de Cultura Económica
  Publication placeMéxico DF, México
  Publication year2002
  Page34, 42, 45, 48-49, 52-53, 56-57, 59-62, 65, 9
  Volume
  Issue
  NotesMenton rereads every book, article, review, notes and theses written since his first stay in Mexico in 1948-49 until the present for the purpose of finding the theoretical basis of his approaches to literature. His approaches to literature can be summed up in two words: "scrutiny" and "walking." Once he began this task, Menton realized that intrinsic reading is not always enough because it could not be done in a void. As much as a reader analyzes the form of a work with all the variety of technical resources, one has to place it into its sociopolitical context as well as the literary context.
  URL

  Record 6 of 56
  AuthorPineda Botero, Álvaro
  Title"Cien años de soledad, El otoño del patriarca, El amor en los tiempos del cólera. Gabriel García Márquez," Juicios de residencia: Una novela colombiana, 1934-1985
  PublisherFondo Editorial Universidad EAFIT
  Publication placeMedellín, Colombia
  Publication year2001
  Page193-216, 231-240, 271-282
  Volume
  Issue
  NotesPineda Botero provides an interpretation of author and reader in One Hundred Years of Solitude, and analyzes the role of Melquíades as protagonist, writer and prophet; meanwhile, Aureliano represents the reader.
  URL

  Record 7 of 56
  AuthorGonzález Echeverría, Roberto.
  TitleCrítica práctica
  PublisherFondo de Cultura Económica
  Publication placeMéxico DF, México
  Publication year2002
  Page17, 24-29, 43, 73, 115, 130-146, 233
  Volume
  Issue
  NotesGonzález Echeverría compiles in Crítica Práctica/Práctica Crítica a brilliant set of essays, scattered before in diverse, specialized mediums, to comment with a broader audience the origins and horizons of narrative works represented in the Latin American world: Gabriel García Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, Alejo Carpentier, and Severo Sarduy, who give a temperate and universal voice to our continent. González Echeverría concentrates on the creative zones specific to those authors to discern aspects that up until now have rarely been analyzed.
  URL

  Record 8 of 56
  AuthorNeissa, Peter Anthony
  TitleDictators, Directives, Tyranical Figures, and Cultural Discourse: Jorge Zalamea, Gabriel García Márquez, and Mario Vargas Llosa
  PublisherBoston College
  Publication placeBoston, MA
  Publication year2004
  Page
  Volume
  Issue
  Notes"This study focuses on how a dictator or a culturally dominant power can use language to impose cultural values. As an instrument of power, language is used by dictator to educate, induce, or manipulate a nation's citizens into acting in accordance with the ruling power's cultural values and beliefs. Jorge Zalamea in 'El Gran Burundún-Burundá ha muerto'(1951), Gabriel García Márquez in 'El otoño del patriarca' (1975), and Mario Vargas Llosa in 'La fiesta del Chivo' (2000), draw attention to how the use of vernacular can resist cultural imposition by employing culture-specific items in order to represent its own culture and nature of reality. When translated into a different language, culture-specific items created a conflict of meaning between the original text and the translated text. This discord arises because the translated reference no longer conveys its original message. The original significance has been substituted in the translated text for a new meaning determined by the dictator or translators ideology, usage, or the untranslable nature of the original words. These culturally loaded words are categorized into three areas of language defines relationships of power and resistance between a dictator and his nation, or between one culture and another, such as the United States over Latin American Culture. The analysis of culture-specific items presented in this dissertation will provide an understanding of how language functions as an instrument for the imposition to gain or maintain power in 'El Gran Burundú-Burundá ha muerto', 'El otoño del patriarca', and 'La fiesta del Chivo.' Culture-specific items also suggest how translators may substitute the values of the source culture in the original text for their own cultural biases when translating from Spanish to English."
  URL

  Record 9 of 56
  AuthorPedros-Gascon, Antonio Francisco
  TitleDiálogos transatlanticos: Un "boom" de ida y vuelta
  PublisherOhio State University
  Publication placeOhio, United States
  Publication year2007
  Page262 p.
  Volume
  Issue
  Notes(Abstract) "Alejo Carpentier's theory of 'lo real maravilloso americano' gave shape to the 'interpretative community' of the Latin American 'Boom'--which dovetailed authors such as Gabriel García Márquez, Mario Vargas Llosa, and Julio Cortázar among others. Like a boomerang sent into the future, this identity 'propuesta de significado,' or proposition of meaning, was thought to be miraculously embodied by the Cuban Revolution...The transnational cross-border encounters of the 'Boom' shaped and contributed to a (post)modernization of the Spanish 'imaginario patrio' and induced a feeling of anxiety that revolutionized the relations between Spanish authors and 'their' inherited tradition and language." Ph.D Dissertation
  URL

  Record 10 of 56
  AuthorGibbs, Melisandre
  TitleEcluses, suivi de, La narration multiple dans le roman: 'Des feuille dans la bourrasque' de Gabriel García Márquez
  PublisherMcGill University
  Publication placeMontreal, Canada
  Publication year2004
  Page
  Volume
  Issue
  URL

   Next 10 Records

Jump to Records: 1 | 11 | 21 | 31 | 41 | 51