The Literature Book

(ff) #1

283


All Aureliano’s victories come to
nothing however, as the country
remains convulsed by conflict, a
parody of the bloody struggles that
wracked Latin America in the 19th
century. The wars bring death and
violence to the previously peaceful
Macondo, and Aureliano’s nephew
Arcadio becomes a dictatorial
governor until he is shot by a firing

squad. The town has been changed
forever, and the opening of a new
railroad exposes Macondo to the
influence of the outside world for
the first time.
At first the villagers are enthralled
by the wonders of modernity—they
cannot understand how an actor
who dies in one movie, can come
back to life to appear in another—but

Macondo soon becomes an outpost
of US economic imperialism. The
American Fruit Company turns the
town into a banana plantation,
controlled by a small encampment
of Americans. When the workers go
on strike for better conditions, they
are massacred in an episode that
forms the violent catalyst of the
town’s final decline. ❯❯

See also: Ficciones 245 ■ Hopscotch 274 –75 ■ Pedro Páramo 287–88 ■ The Death of Artemio Cruz 290 ■ The Time of
the Hero 290 ■ Midnight’s Children 300–05 ■ The House of the Spirits 334 ■ Love in the Time of Cholera 335 ■ 2666 339

POSTWAR WRITING


Santa Sofía
de la Piedad Arcadio 17 sons

Úrsula
Iguarán

José Arcadio
Buendía

Remedios
Moscote

Colonel
Aureliano
Buendía

Rebeca José Arcadio Pilar Ternera Amaranta

Unknown
cousins

Aureliano
José

Remedios
the Beauty

José Arcadio
Segundo

Aureliano
Segundo

Petra Cotes Fernanda del
Carpio

Gaston

Amaranta
Úrsula

José Meme
Arcadio II

Mauricio
Babilonia

Aureliano III

The same names recur across Aureliano II
the seven generations of the
Buendía family with bewildering
regularity. This family tree depicts
the various relationships of the
Buendías with family members
in yellow boxes and incestuous
couplings shown by yellow lines.

US_280-285_Solitude.indd 283 08/10/2015 13:10

Free download pdf