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

Black Shack Alley

Impression   This week’s reading on Black Shack Alley covers underlying themes including slavery, poverty, violence, trauma, and colonialism. Readings of some of the descriptive writings illustrating the violence and infliction of pain such as the bruising instilled disheartening images to me as I read. The themes in this book are much more serious than […]

Posted in Blogs, Zobel | Tagged with Colonialism, oppression, slavery, trauma

black shack alley- Zobel

This book follows the hardships of those who were trapped by the French aristocracy and told they would be free, yet are still victims of poverty and oppression. Working in the sugar cane fields because it is their only source of income they are invisible to everybody else. I found this book extremely enlightening and […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with cane fields, community, oppression, poverty

[Deep Rivers], under the oppression and dissonance

I was intimidated by the book before actually reading the book, since it doubled the length than the book read before this week. I was unconfident to even finish the book in time. However, [Deep Rivers] was, in my opinion, way easier to understand compare to the first few books previously read. Following the easiness […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with cultural dissonance, identity crisis, oppression

“My Brilliant Friend” by Elena Ferrante

I absolutely loved My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante. Even though my expectations were high, the novel did not disappoint and I’m very happy I get to end this course on a good note. My Brilliant Friend is a novel … Continue reading →

Posted in Blogs, Ferrante | Tagged with dialect, friendship, Italy, misogyny, oppression

Robert Bolaño’s Amulet: My Thoughts

Roberto Bolaño’s Amulet was much more violent than I expected the story to be. It focuses on the War in Mexico as told through the perspective of Auxilio Lacouture. Lacouture is a Uruguayan woman who moved to Mexico in the 1960’s. I think this has been my favourite book so far as I have found a better way to read the later books compared to some of the initial ones read. Bolaño writes such a tragic and horrifying story with so much tranquility and peacefulness. For such a sad story, it is described very beautifully. 

This novel taught me about the war and massacre of Tlatelolco in 1968. I had never even heard of the Tlatelolco massacre until this reading. Similar to Manea’s novel, the story draws from real life instances to educate the readers about history. I think it is important to read novel’s of this kind. We consume so much news and media content that we have become desensitized to violence in the world. 

Lacouture is forced to take shelter in a woman’s bathroom during the War in Mexico in the 1960’s. She hides from the military in the bathroom for many days on the University campus. While her peers are arrested and killed, she hides from the police for fourteen-days. She is then the only person who holdouts being on campus during that time. She spends her time thinking about both her past and her future as the story jumps between the two. I find the way that the story was written to be very interesting. It seemed as though there were tangents that held little information, followed by paragraphs full of information. 

Similarly to other stories, I think that the aim of this novel is to appreciate the story in it’s entirety, rather than rip it apart looking for specifics. This course has taught me to read older literature with a different approach. Rather than hyper-fixate on details, it is important to read between the lines and learn from the entirety of the story. I appreciate getting to learn this new way of reading older literature as it makes it much more interesting. 

The ending of the story was the most impactful in my opinion. The “ghost-children” singing and walking together, it has a more ominous and apocalyptic tone than the rest of the story. My question to my classmates is: Was this also the most impactful part of the story for you? If not, what was? 

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with oppression, tragedy, war

Robert Bolaño’s Amulet: My Thoughts

Roberto Bolaño’s Amulet was much more violent than I expected the story to be. It focuses on the War in Mexico as told through the perspective of Auxilio Lacouture. Lacouture is a Uruguayan woman who moved to Mexico in the 1960’s. I think this has been my favourite book so far as I have found a better way to read the later books compared to some of the initial ones read. Bolaño writes such a tragic and horrifying story with so much tranquility and peacefulness. For such a sad story, it is described very beautifully. 

This novel taught me about the war and massacre of Tlatelolco in 1968. I had never even heard of the Tlatelolco massacre until this reading. Similar to Manea’s novel, the story draws from real life instances to educate the readers about history. I think it is important to read novel’s of this kind. We consume so much news and media content that we have become desensitized to violence in the world. 

Lacouture is forced to take shelter in a woman’s bathroom during the War in Mexico in the 1960’s. She hides from the military in the bathroom for many days on the University campus. While her peers are arrested and killed, she hides from the police for fourteen-days. She is then the only person who holdouts being on campus during that time. She spends her time thinking about both her past and her future as the story jumps between the two. I find the way that the story was written to be very interesting. It seemed as though there were tangents that held little information, followed by paragraphs full of information. 

Similarly to other stories, I think that the aim of this novel is to appreciate the story in it’s entirety, rather than rip it apart looking for specifics. This course has taught me to read older literature with a different approach. Rather than hyper-fixate on details, it is important to read between the lines and learn from the entirety of the story. I appreciate getting to learn this new way of reading older literature as it makes it much more interesting. 

The ending of the story was the most impactful in my opinion. The “ghost-children” singing and walking together, it has a more ominous and apocalyptic tone than the rest of the story. My question to my classmates is: Was this also the most impactful part of the story for you? If not, what was? 

Posted in Blogs, Bolaño | Tagged with oppression, tragedy, war

Week 5 – Laforet’s “Nada”

“Nada” has an apocalyptic, oppressive, and hungry atmosphere. Our narrator, Andrea describes her family members as “ghostly women” (pg 6), as “elongated and somber” (pg 7), as “perverse people” (pg9) and her uncle Juan’s face as a “skull” (pg 6). These characters all seem to be destroyed and hollow after the war. Even the house […]

Posted in Blogs, Laforet | Tagged with nada, oppression

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