Historical memory has a particular value in analyzing events and characters that give life to stories from the past. Jorge Edwards specifies that the story’s description is nothing more than the literary success of a writer who navigates the vicissitudes of life and history, as he rightly points out. History must be observed carefully and as a “conjecture” that points, in the first place, to an experience of “memory” and that keeps alive, despite time, the unique reality of a country and its people. Like Edwards, we attempt to wander through reminiscences and recollection. Our narrative experience is simple. However, it is an observation and representation of history with a testimonial value in its approach. As the novelist points out, the testimony of history is the most creative thing that the writer has. In the same way, our effort is neither more nor less the rescue, through these short stories and their language, of facts and characters that are part of realities, in which their protagonists make time pass and tell us things from the past.
Edwards is an inspirational source, like other novelists, whetting our appetites in his search for history, facts, and experiences that give us a unique opportunity to delve into the process of history in an endless dialogue that enriches and continues giving life to the past, in an infinite invention of it. It is ultimately the feeling that we have of things that happened and that we can continue learning from them. These memories and lived experiences are stories that perpetuate characters, intellectuals, writers, works, teachings, and places that express an essential part of life through readings, reflections, and significant looks at chronicles that resist oblivion and disappearance. From each of these short stories, we gather a vital part of the search for the truth and the real meaning of life.
作者簡介:
Dr. Miguel �ngel Gonz�z Chand� an SVD priest from Chile, earned his Ph.D. in Systematic Theology at KULeuven-Belgium, and his BA in Theology from the Pontificia Universidad Cat�a of Santiago, Chile. He is a full professor at Fu Jen Catholic University, Taipei. He has taught Latin American Literature and Languages for almost 20 years. He has some 22 publications and was a co-editor of the IAFOR Journal of Education until 2021. He has published the following books Jorge Edwards: el novelista que deambula por la historia (2011); El mundo infantil a trav�de los ojos de Marcela Paz (2014); Roberto Bola�n perspectiva: enigma de una b�squeda (2015). Dr Gonz�z has published a chapter titled The Invention of Morel, a Projection on Dreams and Immortality (2022).
目錄
Foreword
Introduction
1. Rancagua
2. Memories of the Past (I)
3. Memories of the Past (II)
4. Victoria
5. Box Hill
6. Leuven
7. Hong Xiuquan (I)
8. Hong Xiuquan and the Taiping Rebellion 1851-1864 (II)
9. Taiping Ideology in Today's Reading
10. José Donoso Life and Work
11. José Donoso: El lugar sin límites
12. Dialogues with Marcela Paz
13. Papelucho Historian
14. Papelucho: Interior monologue, Loneliness and Dialogue
15. Perico Climbs Through Chile
16. Jorge Edwards and the "Conjecture"
17. Jorge Edwards, El sueño de la historia
18. In Memoriam of Michel De Montaigne
19. Georges De Schrijver (1935-2016)
20. Persona Non-Grata
21. "The Little Paris" (小巴黎)
22. The Xin Zhuang Neighborhood
23. María Luisa Bombal
24. Taishan
25. Roberto Bolaño and the Apocalypse
26. Science Fiction: Literary Genre and Dystopia
27. The Savage Detectives
28. La Araucana: A Dystopian Epic
29. Gabriela Mistral
30. Inés del alma mía
31. Isabel Allende, Pain, Death and Hope
32. Portrait of a Woman
33. Graduation Theatre
34. Magic Realism
35. Pedro Páramo: Despotism
36. In Memory of Ambrose Bierce, Old Gringo (1985)
37. Theodor Adorno and Dorothee Sölle
38. Monterroso in Brief
39. Mario Benedetti
40. Alejo Carpentier and The Kingdom of this World
41. Women Writers
42. Rómulo Gallegos: Doña Bárbara
43. Sewell
44. The Smoke Tragedy
45. Theodor Adorno and the "Meaninglessness of Suffering"
46. Jon Sobrino
47. Gustavo Gutiérrez: Third World "Dependence"
48. The face of Jesus in China, Zhong Kui: the Daoist Hero
49. Women and Men in Taiping Society
50. Language and Identity
51. Laura Esquivel: Women in Power
52. Adolfo Bioy Casares: The experience of Love and Pain
53. Utopia and Dystopia
54. Charism that Leads to Tragedy
55. A New World: The War at the Ends of the World
56. Teaching at Fu Jen University
57. Gabriel García Márquez and the Leaf Storm
58. La Malinche: A Woman Between Two Worlds
59. An Adventurous Woman
60. Pablo Neruda
61. Spanish Department in Fu Jen
62. Critical Analysis of Literary Works
63. Isabel Allende: Family Sage
64. El Señor presidente: Carnivalesque Perspective
65. Children's and Youth Literature
66. Aurora del Valle: A Free Woman
67. Carlos Fuentes: La campaña
68. Gabriel García Márquez: One Hundred Years of Solitude
69. “El Axolotl”
70. The Crying of Latin American
71. Michael Houllebecq: The Dystopian Submission
72. Herbert George Wells: The Time Machine
73. Roberto Bolaño: Distant Star
74. Power and Truth in the Patristic Age
75. Roberto Bolaño and the Window Enigma
76. Space and House in Isabel Allende
77. The Personal History of the Literary Genre "El Boom"
78. Age of Enlightenment
79. Octavio Paz: The Labyrinth of Solitude
80. Elizabeth Burgoyne Corbett
81. George Orwell: Animal Farm
82. Magic in the Kitchen, Sensuality and Feminine Space
83. Horacio Quiroga
84. Dostoevsky's House (2008)
85. Jorge Luis Borges: "El Sur"
86. Myth and Magic
87. Margaret Atwood: The Handmaid's Tale
88. Simón Bolivar: The General in His Labyrinth
89. A Tribute to Diego Rivera
Foreword
Introduction
1. Rancagua
2. Memories of the Past (I)
3. Memories of the Past (II)
4. Victoria
5. Box Hill
6. Leuven
7. Hong Xiuquan (I)
8. Hong Xiuquan and the Taiping Rebellion 1851-1864 (II)
9. Taiping Ideology in Today's Reading
10. José Donoso Life and Work
11. José Donoso: El lugar sin límites
12. Dialogues with Marcela Paz
13. Papelucho Historian
14. Papelucho: Interior monologue, Loneliness and Dialogue
15. Perico Climbs Through Chile
16. Jorge Edwards and the "Conjecture"
17. Jo...