The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World [short story]
by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
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Text of a short story by the notable Colombian author accompanied by photographs recreating the tale.Tags
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Ever since the 1968 publication of this short story by Gabriel García Márquez, a story about how one morning children from a small fishing village discover a body on the beach, many are the readers who have fallen deeply in love with this tale. And many are the writers who have written commentary and interpretations. Rather than adding yet again another commentary, reflecting on the vast richness of this tale has prompted me to ask the questions below. And below my questions is a link to the story itself. Special thanks goes out to Goodreads friend Aldo Ramírez from Lima, Peru who brought this marvelous story to my attention. Thanks, Aldo!
The woman in the village go crazy with their projecting all type of amazing powers onto the show more drowned man. How do we, both individually and as a culture, project our dreams and aspirations onto other people? Do we project onto friends, family, coworkers, neighbors, strangers or are we more inclined to project onto people at a distance, say, famous celebrities or athletes?
These villagers have no Neptune or god of the sea. Is the drowned man functioning as a kind of Neptune, since, after all, the lifeblood and livelihood of the village is so dependent on the sea? Do the villagers’ powerful emotions speak to how we as humans yearn for direct contact with the divine?
I recall Jacob Bronowski saying how ancient societies had their myth of creation and now we in our modern world live with the myth of creativity. What place does myth have in your life? Is there one particular myth or area of creativity that really adds a sense of aliveness to your day-to-day living?
Similar to the role of the drowned man in the story, do you dream of having a larger-than-life presence in the world? I recall reading somewhere how a significant percentage of both men and women in the US dream of being a superstar athlete.
Turns out, the drowned man, Esteban (the name means “crowned in victory”) gives the village an identity. Do you live in a community where a person or event provides a positive identity all members of the community cherish? If not, is this one of the consequences of our more modern, urban living?
THE HANDSOMEST DROWNED MAN IN THE WORLD by Gabriel García Márquez
https://www.utdallas.edu/~aargyros/hansomest.htm show less
Ever since the 1968 publication of this short story by Gabriel García Márquez, a story about how one morning children from a small fishing village discover a body on the beach, many are the readers who have fallen deeply in love with this tale. And many are the writers who have written commentary and interpretations. Rather than adding yet again another commentary, reflecting on the vast richness of this tale has prompted me to ask the questions below. And below my questions is a link to the story itself. Special thanks goes out to Goodreads friend Aldo Ramírez from Lima, Peru who brought this marvelous story to my attention. Thanks, Aldo!
The woman in the village go crazy with their projecting all type of amazing powers onto the show more drowned man. How do we, both individually and as a culture, project our dreams and aspirations onto other people? Do we project onto friends, family, coworkers, neighbors, strangers or are we more inclined to project onto people at a distance, say, famous celebrities or athletes?
These villagers have no Neptune or god of the sea. Is the drowned man functioning as a kind of Neptune, since, after all, the lifeblood and livelihood of the village is so dependent on the sea? Do the villagers’ powerful emotions speak to how we as humans yearn for direct contact with the divine?
I recall Jacob Bronowski saying how ancient societies had their myth of creation and now we in our modern world live with the myth of creativity. What place does myth have in your life? Is there one particular myth or area of creativity that really adds a sense of aliveness to your day-to-day living?
Similar to the role of the drowned man in the story, do you dream of having a larger-than-life presence in the world? I recall reading somewhere how a significant percentage of both men and women in the US dream of being a superstar athlete.
Turns out, the drowned man, Esteban (the name means “crowned in victory”) gives the village an identity. Do you live in a community where a person or event provides a positive identity all members of the community cherish? If not, is this one of the consequences of our more modern, urban living?
THE HANDSOMEST DROWNED MAN IN THE WORLD by Gabriel García Márquez
https://www.utdallas.edu/~aargyros/hansomest.htm show less
Según Borges, las verdaderas imágenes no son el resultado de un proceso creativo, sino la feliz coincidencia un descubrimiento. Gabo y Hernán Díaz comparten el oficio de fundadores de imágenes, cada uno desde su respectivo punto de vista.
Tributo a una amistad de varias décadas, El ahogado más hermoso del mundo es un singular experimento que ofrece al público una valiosa síntesis de varias búsquedas. De una parte, la prosa certera de Gabo que dibuja el espíritu mágico del Caribe en uno de sus mejores relatos, y de otro lado, la lente delicada de Hernán Díaz descubriendo macondos en la costa atlántica colombiana.
Tributo a una amistad de varias décadas, El ahogado más hermoso del mundo es un singular experimento que ofrece al público una valiosa síntesis de varias búsquedas. De una parte, la prosa certera de Gabo que dibuja el espíritu mágico del Caribe en uno de sus mejores relatos, y de otro lado, la lente delicada de Hernán Díaz descubriendo macondos en la costa atlántica colombiana.
Mar 12, 2022Spanish
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Gabriel García Márquez was born in Aracataca, Colombia on March 6, 1927. After studying law and journalism at the National University of Colombia in Bogota, he became a journalist. In 1965, he left journalism, to devote himself to writing. His works included Leaf Storm, No One Writes to the Colonel, The Evil Hour, One Hundred Years of Solitude, show more Love in the Time of Cholera, The Autumn of the Patriarch, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, The General in His Labyrinth, Clandestine in Chile, and the memoir Living to Tell the Tale. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982. He died on April 17, 2014 at the age of 87. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Eyes of a Blue Dog | Big Mama’s Funeral: Short Stories | Innocent Erendira and Other Stories by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (indirect)
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- Canonical title
- The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World [short story]
- Original title
- El ahogado más hermoso del mundo
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- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Children's Books
- DDC/MDS
- 863 — Literature & rhetoric Spanish Literature Spanish fiction
- LCC
- PQ8180.17 .A73 .A64 — Language and Literature French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literatures Spanish literature Provincial, local, colonial, etc. Spanish America
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