CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE
and the taboos that surround
foreignness and colonialism.
Alternating between first- and
third-person narration and present
and past tense, the novel uses a
spare, poetic prose style.
THE HANDMAID’S TALE
(1985), MARGARET ATWOOD
A dystopian vision of the near future,
The Handmaid’s Tale by Canadian
writer Atwood (see p.327) depicts
an America where the establishment
of a Christian theocracy has led to
the loss of women’s freedoms.
Caste and class become organizing
principles of society, allowing
Atwood to comment on present-day
inequalities. The narrator is Offred,
a “handmaid”—a concubine for
reproductive purposes in an era
of rampant sexually transmitted
diseases. Her master develops
feelings for her and gives her
privileges, as well as access to
some of the regime’s secrets. She
later becomes implicated in a
growing resistance movement. The
power of this highly controversial
work of fiction comes from its
devastating critique of patriarchy
by exaggeration of its features.
LOVE IN THE TIME
OF CHOLERA
(1985), GABRIEL GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ
A tender exploration of love’s
difficulties and ambiguities, Love
in the Time of Cholera by Nobel
Prize-winning Colombian novelist
Márquez (see p.282) deftly navigates
the twists and turns of human
feeling. Two versions of love are
presented, each enshrined in a
male character: one passionate,
and the other pragmatic. The
passionate one, Florentino Ariza,
proposes to his youthful sweetheart
50 years after first declaring his love
and being rejected in favor of
Dr. Juvenal Urbino, the pragmatist.
A central question in the book is,
which kind of love is likelier to
bring happiness? Cholera features
literally in the narrative, but also
serves as an imaginative analogy
for infatuation. Other themes in the
work include acceptance of aging
and the continuation of romantic
love among the elderly, even as
the body grows more infirm.
WHITE NOISE
(1985), DON DELILLO
In his best-selling novel White
Noise, author and playwright Don
DeLillo tells of how the chair of
Hitler Studies at a US university is
forced to confront his own mortality
after a chemical spill creates an
“Airborne Toxic Event.” The book
is a darkly amusing examination
of consumerism, intellectual
pretensions within academia, and
the dominance of the media. It also
examines cohesion, trust, and love
special job; being cured will be
his payoff. The book combines
a futuristic vision with elements
of hard-boiled noir.
THE LOVER
(1984), MARGUERITE DURAS
Set in French Indochina in the
1930s, The Lover draws upon the
real-life experiences of its French
author, Marguerite Duras (1914–96).
It details the intense affair between
a 15-year-old girl from a poor family
and a wealthy Chinese man of 27,
yet beyond this it is also concerned
with female empowerment, the
relationship between mother and
daughter, emerging adolescence,
335
Don DeLillo
Born in New York City in 1936,
Don DeLillo garnered a cult
following with his early works,
entering the mainstream with
White Noise. Growing up in an
Italian Catholic family in the
Bronx, he discovered a thirst
for reading during a summer
job as a parking attendant.
He worked as an advertising
copywriter after graduating in
communications arts in 1958
but, disillusioned with the job,
he quit in 1964 in order to write
fiction. DeLillo’s novels have
been described as postmodern
in tone and focus on the US’s
material excess and empty
culture as recurring themes.
Key works
1985 White Noise (see right)
1988 Libra
1991 Mao II
1997 Underworld
2011 The Angel Esmeralda
... she would not bury herself
alive inside these four walls to
sew her shroud, as native
widows were expected to do.
Love in the Time
of Cholera
Gabriel García Márquez
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