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RMST 202 Literatures and Cultures of the Romance World II: Modern to Post-Modern
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Mexico

Fuentes Questions

Fuentes Questions

Questions on The Old Gringo

Posted in Fuentes questions | Tagged with Mexico, questions

Fuentes Videos

Fuentes Videos

Videos about Carlos Fuentes and the Mexican Revolution

Posted in Fuentes videos | Tagged with history, interviews, Mexico, revolution, tv, videos

Bolaño’s “Amulet”

Wow, lots to unpack with this one. This book was a rollercoaster, not unlike many of the books we’ve read in this course. Again, the narrator takes us through the messy pathways of her mind as she recounts memories, some good and some bad. In this case, most are decidedly bad. Auxilio’s experience of the […]

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with death, Imagination, memory, Mexico, sadness

Bolaño’s Amulet; thinking about Auxilio

For this week, we were given the task of reading Amulet by Robert Bolaño. I found this to be one of the best books we’ve read in this course so far. This book, like many of the other ones, have the consistent theme of memory, and I think repetition. The story is one long monologue, […]

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with Chile, history, history of the future, literature, memory, Mexico, narrative, poet, Poetry, poverty, recollection, sad, sadness, trauma, Weekly Book Blog

blog#10 – the traits of Womanhood —

blog#10 – the traits of Womanhood — The first thing that really took my attention while reading Roberto Bolaño’s book Amulet, was the fact that Bolaño himself was writing from a female character’s perspective. I know its quite normal for a male author to write in female voice, but for some reason this is what stuck […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Femineity, Mexico, Roberto Bolaño, Womanhood

Roberto Bolaño – Amulet

In Amulet, we find a Chilean author writing about a fictional Uruguayan protagonist based in Mexico. I felt that this…

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with Conflict, memory, Mexico, unreliable narrator

Amulet

Amulet by Robert Bolano gave such a unique delivery on Latin American history through an unusual narrative. The book’s narrator,…

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with latin america, memories, Mexico, war, Week11

Thoughts on Roberto Bolano’s “Amulet”: Time and the Creation of History

Roberto Bolano’s Amulet was an interesting read particularly because of the way its central motifs interact with one another in a way that feels very natural. On the one hand, the narrative is centrally concerned with time, however its dissection of time is not one of some objective or empirical account of time’s nature, rather […]

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with Chile, future, history, latin america, memories, memory, Mexico, Poetry

“Amulet”, Roberto Bolaño

After reading “Amulet”, I really like how Bolano wrote the violent story in a peaceful and tranquil way, just like how he promised at the beginning of the book. From reflecting on the notorious Tlatelolco Incident in Mexico in 1968, Bolano intends to portray the struggle of entire Latin America as a whole, by blending […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with latinamerica, massacre, Mexico

Week 10 – Robert Bolano "Amulet"

This week, I read ‘Amulet’ by Roberto Bolano.

I found the first paragraph of the story interesting. The narrator started off by telling the readers that this story “…is going to be a horror story. A story of murder, detection and horror. But it wont appear to be, for the simple reason that I am the teller. Told by me, it won’t seem like that. Although, in fact, it’s a story of a terrible crime” (p 1). I never read a story that started off by telling what kind of story it will be, so it grabbed my attention and made me want to continue to read it. After reading the first paragraph, I was preparing myself for a violent story or the memories/fights of the war. However, the story was about a woman, Auxilio Lacouture, who was locked inside a washroom alone “..from the eighteenth to the thirtieth of September”(p 172). Specifically, the fourth floor washroom in the faculty of Philosophy and Literature building at the National Autonomous University (p 22). Due to the invasion of the army, the narrator locked herself inside the washroom for 12 days. With the terrifying situation outside, she tends to deal with her fear by looking back on her memories. 

One of the most vivid moments to me was: when she was hiding in a stall, a soldier opened the washroom door and walked in. The detailed description of what had happened and what she was feeling makes me super nervous about what is going to happen. It felt as if I was hiding with her as well. 

I like how the narrator described things, events, and people in detail. I noticed the narrator uses a lot of similes and metaphors to describe those. The detailed descriptions helped me imagine and picture the scenes in my head. Another thing I like is that the narrator used brackets/side notes to express her ‘inner feelings’.“…I became a bat, I left the university and wandered around Mexico city like a wraith (I can’t in all honesty say like a fairy, although I would like to) and drank and talked and attended literary gatherings (I knew where to find them all) ” (p20). The inner thoughts make me feel’ closer’ to the narrator as I am able to know more about her ‘inner’ feelings. 

After Auxilio saw soldiers, tanks and riot police outside of the window, she went back to the washroom. That brings it to my question for the class: If you were in Auxilio’s situation, what would you do? Would you go back to the washroom and stay there or go somewhere else?


Posted in Blogs | Tagged with memories, Mexico

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