The Absent City
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- $31.99
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- $31.99
Publisher Description
Widely acclaimed throughout Latin America after its 1992 release in Argentina, The Absent City takes the form of a futuristic detective novel. In the end, however, it is a meditation on the nature of totalitarian regimes, on the transition to democracy after the end of such regimes, and on the power of language to create and define reality. Ricardo Piglia combines his trademark avant-garde aesthetics with astute cultural and political insights into Argentina’s history and contemporary condition in this conceptually daring and entertaining work.
The novel follows Junior, a reporter for a daily Buenos Aires newspaper, as he attempts to locate a secret machine that contains the mind and the memory of a woman named Elena. While Elena produces stories that reflect on actual events in Argentina, the police are seeking her destruction because of the revelations of atrocities that she—the machine—is disseminating through texts and taped recordings. The book thus portrays the race to recover the history and memory of a city and a country where history has largely been obliterated by political repression. Its narratives—all part of a detective story, all part of something more—multiply as they intersect with each other, like the streets and avenues of Buenos Aires itself.
The second of Piglia’s novels to be translated by Duke University Press—the first was Artifical Respiration—this book continues the author’s quest to portray the abuses and atrocities that characterize dictatorships as well as the difficulties associated with making the transition to democracy. Translated and with an introduction by Sergio Waisman, it includes a new afterword by the author.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This futuristic and fragmented detective novel blurs the lines between fact and fiction as it meanders through the life and mind of Junior, a reporter at a daily newspaper in Buenos Aires. Aided by Fuyita, a Korean gangster, and a scarred but beautiful woman named Julia, Junior is investigating a machine that contains the memory and mind of Elena, who is based on the real-life wife of Argentine writer Macedonio Fern ndez. Using different stylistic voices, Elena is telling stories. The state police, who fear her revelations about official atrocities against the Argentinean people, are also tracking her down and hope to deactivate her. The metaphoric, disembodied voice of Elena weaves through the overlapping narratives that support the novel and drive it forward, allowing for linguistic critiques and evocations of Argentina's troubled past, particularly the Dirty War, when "everyday life went on in the middle of the horror." Throughout the book, language itself is a protagonist, with long, quasi-academic passages describing the instability and transience of verbal communication. References to Argentine writer/politicians and James Joyce may prove puzzling to some readers. With its intriguing but demanding phrasing and images that confuse and entice, the novel at times requires detective work to solve its hermetic riddles. Though sometimes rarefied, this slim volume is pleasurable and rewarding. FYI: The Absent City has been performed as an opera in Argentina.