Tuesday, March 6, 2018
'A Short Story by Gabriel Garcia Marquez'
'The unthinkable and Sad write up of Innocent Erendira and Her heartless Grandmother is a unforesightful lying apologue by Colombian generator Gabriel Garcia Marquez who drug abuses his life experiences to betray his stories. The narrative character in the floor balances characters and events and eventually breaks, momentarily, off from third soulfulness into first soulfulness mid-story, creating a liminal home connecting the story to almost other world presumably ours. In this short story Marquez is influenced by the literary attempt of naturalism and uses some of the elements to develop the traits of Erendira, the granddaughter, the nanna, Ulises and the settings. Garcia gives a powerful photo of the personality of these characters. veridicalism in lit is an approach that paying back from an analysis of man in wrong of natural forces the alike heredity, environment, and physical drives. naive realism neglects supernatural powers and considers the nature to be the unproblematic reason for everything happening. Marquez strives to picture life accurately with the dehumanization and the romanticization of adolescence that fake Erendira and her grandmothers life, showing the ontogeny of labor by profit and of passiveness by mercilessness; Instead of redundant will, Marquez depicts Erendiras actions as unconquerable by environmental forces surrounding her.\nMarquezs use of naturalistic style, represent Erendira as a human living creature, helps us see her as dehumanized, a real human organism going through real life. At the beginning of the story as the grandmother and Erendira get a ride to a townspeople later on the house ruin down, we see the bring of the dehumanization process. As a payment for the ride, the truck loader, taming her with tenderness. Â(203), makes write out to Erendira. Marquezs use of the give-and-take taming  suggest animal treatment as we usually touch on the word with teach animals. Soon aft erward arriving in the town the grandmother as a flattop Do you like it? Â(205) in which he re... '
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