{"title":"Violence and Hopelessness in the Colombian Novels La Virgen de Los Sicarios and Satanás","authors":"Alan G. Hartman","doi":"10.18085/1549-9502.10.2.48","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n Colombia is a South American nation that has captured the imagination of the world. It is a land of beautiful colonial cities and towns, famous for coffee production, rich emerald mines, and the literature of José Asunción Silva and Gabriel García Márquez. Colombia’s beauty and rich literary history, however, are often overshadowed by the memory of Pablo Escobar, a notorious drug lord, and numerous deadly guerilla groups. Their roles in the international drug trade made Colombia the top producer and exporter of cocaine, which resulted in terrorism and violence that left the country one of the world’s most dangerous.1 In this article, I will explore how violence in Colombia has perpetuated the theme of hopelessness in the nation’s literature beginning in the mid-twentieth century. I will show this in three parts. Firstly, I will trace the history of violence in Colombia through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and show that a literary genre of violence was absent in the nation until 1946, when the period known as “la Violencia” commenced. Secondly, I will explore how hopelessness resulted from violence in Colombia beginning in the period of “la Violencia.” Thirdly, I will show how violence is depicted as an evil that traps the protagonists of the contemporary Colombian novels La Virgen de Los Sicarios and Satanás in a state of hopelessness due to their powerlessness to truly change themselves because of the frustrated society in which they live.","PeriodicalId":352494,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Latino/Latin American Studies","volume":"23 4 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Latino/Latin American Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18085/1549-9502.10.2.48","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Colombia is a South American nation that has captured the imagination of the world. It is a land of beautiful colonial cities and towns, famous for coffee production, rich emerald mines, and the literature of José Asunción Silva and Gabriel García Márquez. Colombia’s beauty and rich literary history, however, are often overshadowed by the memory of Pablo Escobar, a notorious drug lord, and numerous deadly guerilla groups. Their roles in the international drug trade made Colombia the top producer and exporter of cocaine, which resulted in terrorism and violence that left the country one of the world’s most dangerous.1 In this article, I will explore how violence in Colombia has perpetuated the theme of hopelessness in the nation’s literature beginning in the mid-twentieth century. I will show this in three parts. Firstly, I will trace the history of violence in Colombia through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and show that a literary genre of violence was absent in the nation until 1946, when the period known as “la Violencia” commenced. Secondly, I will explore how hopelessness resulted from violence in Colombia beginning in the period of “la Violencia.” Thirdly, I will show how violence is depicted as an evil that traps the protagonists of the contemporary Colombian novels La Virgen de Los Sicarios and Satanás in a state of hopelessness due to their powerlessness to truly change themselves because of the frustrated society in which they live.
哥伦比亚是一个吸引了全世界想象力的南美国家。这片土地上有美丽的殖民地城市和城镇,以咖啡生产、丰富的祖母绿矿山和jos Asunción Silva和Gabriel García Márquez的文学作品而闻名。然而,哥伦比亚的美丽和丰富的文学史常常被臭名昭著的毒枭巴勃罗·埃斯科瓦尔和众多致命的游击组织所掩盖。他们在国际毒品贸易中的角色使哥伦比亚成为可卡因的最大生产国和出口国,这导致了恐怖主义和暴力,使该国成为世界上最危险的国家之一在这篇文章中,我将探讨哥伦比亚的暴力是如何使这个国家的文学从20世纪中期开始的绝望主题延续下去的。我将用三个部分来说明这一点。首先,我将追溯19世纪和20世纪哥伦比亚的暴力历史,并表明直到1946年,当被称为“la Violencia”的时期开始时,这个国家才出现暴力文学类型。其次,我将探讨从“暴力”时期开始的哥伦比亚暴力是如何导致绝望的。第三,我将展示暴力如何被描绘成一种邪恶,使当代哥伦比亚小说La Virgen de Los Sicarios和Satanás的主人公陷入绝望状态,因为他们无法真正改变自己,因为他们所处的社会令人沮丧。