Hi, everyone! Happy weekend! Welcome to my fourth blog. I am so excited since I have already read four books. This week’s book is kind of special, I have a lot of thoughts to share with you. This week we read a book called “The Shrouded Woman…
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with death, life, love, woman
The Shrouded Woman is centered around the perspective of a dead woman, who, though dead, still sees and hears her family and friends who come to her coffin, which plunges the woman into memories of her time spent with these people. The memories triggered by the sequential appearance of her daughter, her old nanny, her […]
Posted in Blogs, Bombal | Tagged with death, Feminism, gender, Latin American feminist literature, love, marriage
“The Shrouded Woman” by María Luisa Bombal, follows a woman named Ana-Maria takes over the book with how she is the symbol of femininity and, in today’s world, is pleasing to the “male gaze.” It definitely may not be intentional, but she does end up being a vocation for three men. As seen in this […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with death, dislike, life, love, male gaze, Relationship, relationships
I really really enjoyed this reading. I think it’s my favourite so far. I loved how much information was packed into the 60 pages, and how much we learned about the shrouded woman, Ana Maria’s life. The more I read, the more I realized it wasn’t just about the life of Ana Maria but was […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Ana Maria, death, family, Hacienda, love, Maria Griselda, Shrouded Woman, Zoila
Nadja by Breton is a fever dream. I was a few pages into the lecture transcription and stopped. The lecture provided too many answers to my questions; I want to try and elaborate a bit on my own first. This is my first time reading a surrealism book. As usual, I avoid learning about the […]
Posted in Blogs, Breton | Tagged with dream, love, madness
“Nadja” is sometimes referred to as a Surrealist love story, yet Nadja does not appear until approximately sixty pages into the novel. The first few pages include theory, Surrealist gossip, Breton’s past, dreams, and explorations of Paris. When Nadja eventually enters the story, the book’s tone shifts to dated diary entries, underlining the immediacy and […]
Posted in Blogs, Breton | Tagged with André Breton, Delusion, love, najda, obsession, Surrealism
Hi everyone, welcome back to my blog. The book for this week is Nadja by Andre Breton. The description of this book as a surrealist romance was intriguing to me, as I’ve enjoyed a few surrealist movies in the past, like Holy Motors and Synecdoche New York. At the same time others, like most of […]
Posted in Blogs, Breton | Tagged with love, nadja, obsesssion, Surrealism, Week 3
I thoroughly enjoyed delving into Roberto Arlt’s, Mad Toy (El juguete rabioso), immersing myself in the compelling narrative that unfolds the tumultuous life of Silvio Astier, a youth entrenched in poverty, yearning for a better existence amid the harsh realities that envelop him. Published in 1926, the novel intricately explores Silvio’s escapades, his intrigue with criminality, […]
Posted in Arlt, Blogs | Tagged with love, poverty, Societal Hierarchies, Wealth
To begin, “Nadja” by Berton Andre, was simple yet a bit complex to read. I say this because the novel did not have any breaks in it such as organizational tactics like chapter cutoffs. Rather this novel just had a blank page that split the narration into different parts. Most writing pieces that I have […]
Posted in Blogs | Tagged with #romantic, blog post, book review, europe, love, novel, romance
Reading André Breton’s Nadja was an interesting experience for me. I honestly did not know what to expect when reading a surrealist novel. For me, the narrative felt like Breton was taking me through his diary, vaguely describing moments, yet at the same time, almost exposing too much. Certain parts, especially regarding the world around […]
Posted in Blogs, Breton | Tagged with love, obsession