Apocalypse, Apotheosis, And Transcendence in Rosa Montero's Temblor. Apocalypse, Apotheosis, And Transcendence in Rosa Montero's Temblor.

Apocalypse, Apotheosis, And Transcendence in Rosa Montero's Temblor‪.‬

Extrapolation 2005, Winter, 46, 4

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Descripción editorial

Temblor (tremor or trembling), (1) Spanish journalist-author Rosa Montero's fifth novel, manifests a continued interest in the themes present in her previous works: feminist issues and a concern for social justice in general, the relationship between the individual and society, death, and the difficulty humans have in communicating with each other. At the same time, the work marks an important turning point in her opus. Her first three novels (Cronica del desamor, A Chronicle of Falling Out of Love, 1979; Te tratare como a una reina, I'll Treat You Like a Queen, 1983; Amado amo, Beloved Master, 1988) are of a decidedly realistic nature, and although her fourth (1987's La funcion delta, The Delta Function) makes use of some elements of science fiction, (2) Temblor constitutes a unique blend of myth, fantasy, science fiction, female bildungsroman, and the gothic. From this work forward, all Montero's novels will make use of the possibilities offered by non-realist narrative. (3) Near the end of Temblor, the protagonist Agua Fria (Cold Water) discovers the history of her world, a history that might well be the future of ours: a nuclear conflagration incinerates the surface of her planet, melting all life and manmade objects into crystals. The only survivors of the catastrophe are the inhabitants of orbital space stations who, when the planet becomes once again habitable, return to found a utopic, egalitarian, millenary society. This civilization eventually degenerates into the totalitarian, theocratic, maternalistic dystopia into which Agua Fria is born. This empire is experiencing not only a political decay, but an existential one as well: it has been many years since any children were born there, and a fog of nothingness is devouring vast areas of land. (4) Adults are trained in the modo de mirar preservativo or preservative gaze, which they use to prevent the space or object observed from disappearing into the fog, but it is a battle they are losing. Agua Fria's heroic quest is to bring down the empire and save her world from nonexistence, two inextricably interdependent goals. In the denouement, the empire experiences another apocalypse, the planet is thus saved, and the pregnant heroine literally walks off into the sunset.

GÉNERO
Técnicos y profesionales
PUBLICADO
2005
22 de diciembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
36
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Extrapolation
TAMAÑO
212,9
KB

Más libros de Extrapolation

Asimov's Foundation Trilogy: From the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Cowboy Heroes. Asimov's Foundation Trilogy: From the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Cowboy Heroes.
2008
Earth Abides: A Return to Origins (Critical Essay) Earth Abides: A Return to Origins (Critical Essay)
2007
Virtual Histories and Counterfactual Myths: Christopher Priest's the Separation (Critical Essay) Virtual Histories and Counterfactual Myths: Christopher Priest's the Separation (Critical Essay)
2007
"the Monkey's Paw" and Freud's Three Caskets Theme (Sigmund Freud's Essay "the Theme of the Three Caskets") (Critical Essay) "the Monkey's Paw" and Freud's Three Caskets Theme (Sigmund Freud's Essay "the Theme of the Three Caskets") (Critical Essay)
2007
Revolutions from the Waist Downwards: Desire As Rebellion in Yevgeny Zamyatin's We, George Orwell's 1984, and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (Critical Essay) Revolutions from the Waist Downwards: Desire As Rebellion in Yevgeny Zamyatin's We, George Orwell's 1984, and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (Critical Essay)
2007
Unreliable Narration and the Fantastic in Kingsley Amis's the Green Man and Nigel Williams's Witchcraft (Critical Essay) Unreliable Narration and the Fantastic in Kingsley Amis's the Green Man and Nigel Williams's Witchcraft (Critical Essay)
2007