This section contains 12,789 words (approx. 43 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Hart, Patricia. “Magic Feminism in Isabel Allende's The Stories of Eva Luna.” In Multicultural Literatures through Feminist/Poststructuralist Lenses, edited by Barbara Frey Waxman, pp. 103-36. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 1993.
In the following essay, Hart contends that Allende employs the technique of magic realism in The Stories of Eva Luna in order to present a feminist perspective on issues such as prostitution, domestic violence, and rape.
Magic used to show the reader what equality between the sexes should be is a key technique employed by Isabel Allende in The Stories of Eva Luna.1 In the long tradition of magic realism in Latin American letters, the point has never been to hold up an exact mirror to reality, but rather to reflect deeper truths about human nature, sociopolitical conditions, and mortality through what on the surface often appear flamboyant, contradictory, or impossible events. That is exactly...
This section contains 12,789 words (approx. 43 pages at 300 words per page) |