Gabriel García Márquez Collection

There are 108 records in "Interviews".
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  Record 91 of 108
  AuthorDetwiler, Louise A.
  Title"Textual Polysemy and Narrative Univocality in Gabriel García Márquez's 'Crónica de una muerte anunciada'," Crítica hispánica
  PublisherEast Tennessee State University
  Publication placeJohnson City, TN
  Publication year(2003)
  Pagepp. 37-50
  Volume25
  Issue1
  Notes
  URL

  Record 92 of 108
  AuthorDetwiler, Louise A.
  TitleTextual Polysemy and Narrative Univocality in Gabriel García Márquez's Crónica de una muerte anunciada. Crítica Hispánica.
  PublisherDuquesne University
  Publication placePittsburgh, PA
  Publication year2003
  Pagep. 37-50
  Volume25
  Issue1&2
  NotesDetwiler says of Crónica de una muerte anunciada, "a short narrative by perhaps the most famous of the Boom writers, García Márquez's 1981 work dismantles the steps involved in producing an eyewitness account of a past event...[and] equates the production of eyewitness testimony with the act of making fiction."
  URL

  Record 93 of 108
  AuthorThomas, Katherine M.
  Title"The Demon of Solitude," Palara
  PublisherUniversity of Missouri-Columbia
  Publication placeColumbia, MO
  Publication year2003
  Page17-25
  Volume
  Issue7
  NotesKatherine M. Thomas analyzes Gabriel García Márquez's book Del amor y otros demonios.
  URL

  Record 94 of 108
  AuthorMarting, Diane E
  Title"The End of Erendira's Prostitution", Hispanic Review
  PublisherUniversity of Pennsylvania
  Publication placeUnited States
  Publication yearSpring 2001
  Pagepp. 175-190
  Volume69
  Issue2
  NotesAbstract: "Marting discusses Gabriel García Márquez's 'La increíble historia,' a story about an 11-year-old prostitute named Erendira, and also discusses prostitution in several other texts by Márquez. Overlooked in comparison to genre and myth, the story's social themes and realist strategies reveal Marquez' early interest in criticizing aspects of women's oppression."
  URL

  Record 95 of 108
  AuthorSghirlanzoni, Angelo ; Carella, Francesco
  Title"The Insomnia Plague: A Gabriel García Márquez Story" Neurological Sciences
  PublisherSpringer Verlag
  Publication place
  Publication yearAugust 2000
  Pagepp. 251-253
  Volume21
  Issue4
  Notes"'All the great writers have good eyes' is a sentence by V. Nabokov that is very suitable for G.G. Márquez and his One Hundred Years of Solitude. The novel, published in 1967, introduces among many others, the character of little Rebeca, whose frailness and greenish skin revealed hunger 'that was older than she was'. The girl, because of a pica syndrome, only liked to eat earth and the cake of whitewash. But her fate appears to be determined by the lethal insomnia plague, whose most fearsome part was not the impossibility of sleeping but its inexorable evolution toward a loss of memory in which the sick person 'sinks into a kind of idiocy that had no past'. Rebeca's lethal insomnia looks quite similar to the 'peculiar, fatal disorder of sleep' originally described by Lugaresi et al. in 1986. One Hundred Years of Solitude shows that G.G. Márquez was gifted not only with good eyes, but has the seductive power of changing reality into fantasy, while transforming his visions into reality."-- Scopus
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  Record 96 of 108
  AuthorRendon, M.
  Title"The Latino and his culture: Chronicle of a death foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez," American Journal of Psychoanalysis
  PublisherHuman Sciences Press
  Publication placeNew York, NY
  Publication year1994
  Pagepp. 345-358
  Volume54
  Issue4
  Notes"Analyzes how the articulation of memory accomplishes a therapeutic purpose in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel `Chronicle of a Death Foretold.' Translation of the memory of events into language to reach the soothing consciousness of meaning; Plot; Central dramatic triad and characterology; Psychological structure of the novel; Sociocultural structure; Theory of seduction."-- EBSCOhost
  URL

  Record 97 of 108
  AuthorCraig, Herbert E.
  Title"The Postmodern Novel in Latin America: Politics, Culture and the Crisis of Truth/Postmodernidades latinoamericanas: la novela postmoderna en Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Perú y Bolivia/ The Modern Latin-American Novel," Chasqui
  PublisherUniversity of Georgia
  Publication placeUnited States
  Publication yearMay 2000
  Pagepp. 125-128
  Volume29
  Issue1
  NotesCraig analyzes the claims set for in three of Raymond L. Williams' books, that "the pre-Boom and Boom were essentially modernist but that by the mid-1970s, as the Boom started to wane, Latin American narrative began to shift toward postmodernism." Craig selects a few of García Márquez's works and explains how they are either modernist or postmodernist.
  URL

  Record 98 of 108
  AuthorAnderson, Jon Lee
  Title"The Power of García Márquez," The New Yorker
  PublisherF-R Pub. Corp.
  Publication placeNew York, NY
  Publication year(September 27, 1999)
  Pagep. 56
  Volume75
  Issue25
  NotesThis article is a profile of Gabriel García Márquez.
  URLhttp://www.newyorker.com/archive/1999/09/27/1999_09_27_056_TNY_LIBRY_000019163

  Record 99 of 108
  Author
  Title"The Publications of John Butt," Bulletin of Spanish Studies
  PublisherRoutledge
  Publication placeUniversity of Glasgow
  Publication yearJanuary 2006
  Pagepp. 7-17
  Volume83
  Issue1
  Notes"The article presents several lists of books related to Spanish literature featured in the publications of John Butt including "Writers and Politics in Modern Spain," by Hodder and Stoughton, 'Miguel de Unamuno: San Miguel Bueno, 'San Manuel Bueno, mártir,' by Grant and Cutler, 'A New Reference Grammar of Modern Spanish,' by Edward Arnold", and 'The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor,' by Gabriel García Márquez.
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  Record 100 of 108
  AuthorMartin, Gerald
  Title"The Twentieth-Century Spanish American Novel," The Americas
  PublisherThe Catholic University of America
  Publication placeUnited States
  Publication yearJanuary 2005
  Pagepp. 526-527
  Volume61
  Issue3
  NotesGerald Martin reviews "The Twentieth-Century Spanish American Novel" by Raymond Leslie Williams. He critiques the work of Williams, who has written works on authors such as Gabriel García Márquez and Carlos Fuentes. The novel, written by Williams, studies the entirety of twentieth century Spanish American Fiction from 1900-1999.
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