Sunday, 20 March 2011

How does Garcia Marquez's use of setting contribute to the Magical Realism or of creating a modern fable? "A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings" by...

The merging of
fantastic elements with realistic detail, blurring the reader's ability to discern the usual
distinctions is what is known as Magical .  The village of "" may appear appealing,
but it is a complex and disturbing fantasy as Marquez combines realistic detail with
fantastic.

The first to see the old man are Pelayo and his wife, and their
explanations are both realistic and fantastic:

  • In the rear of the
    courtyard of Pelayo's house,  a very old man lies face down in the mud, struggling because of
    his huge buzzard wings. [fantastic]
  • Pelayo and his wife stare at him so
    long that he "becomes familiar," so they form an explanation that he has been
    shipwrecked. [realistic]
  • The neighbor who "knows everything about
    life" explains that the man is a flesh-and-blood angel. [blending of realistic and
    fantastic]
  • Pelayo and his wife put the old angel in a chicken coop
    [blending of realistic and fantastic]

With the priest, there is a
blurry distinction between the natural and the supernatural:


  • Father Gonzago arrives and "reviews his catechism" before looking
    at the pitiful man who resembles "a hug decrepit chicken."  When the priest speaks to
    him in Latin, he suspects that the angel is an impostor because it does not know Latin, and he
    warns the villagers that the devil uses "carnival tricks to confuse the wary."
    [supernatural]
  • But, soon, the courtyard has the "bustle of a
    marketplace and troops have to be called in to disperse the mob that almost knocks down the
    house. [natural]
  • When news spreads, invalids come to be cured; Pelayo and
    Elisenda cram their rooms with money as they charge admission [supernatural with natural] to see
    the old man in a nest with sacramental candles placed along the wire.
  • As
    the spectators pick at him, the angel speaks in his hermetic language with tears in his eyes.  
    Father Gonzaga waits for word from Rome.

The setting, then,
becomes reduced to that of a fantastic carnival:

  • A woman who has
    been turned into a spider arrives.
  • The angel's miracles are ludicrous.  For
    instance, a blind man does not recover his set, but instead grows three teeth, Father Gonzago is
    cured of his insomnia, and Pelayo's courtyard is emptied of people.

After the people leave, the setting becomes more realistic:


  • The couple build a two-story mansion with balconies, high gardens, and
    netting so that the crabs will not enter.  But, the angel still remains.

  • The child starts school, but the drooping stray dying man of an angel
    remains.

The ending is less than fantasy, but has some fantastic
elements:

  • Finally, he survives the winter and improves.  He flies
    off and Elisenda lets out a sigh because he is no longer an annoyance.

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