The Surprising New Life of Magical Realism
Marvelous Ecologies and Postnatural Disasters in Latin America
The Surprising New Life of Magical Realism
Marvelous Ecologies and Postnatural Disasters in Latin America
An exploration of magical realism’s contemporary resurgence, as writers attempt to capture the realities of climate change.
What literary mode could possibly convey the extent of today’s climate catastrophes? In The Surprising New Life of Magical Realism, Charlotte Rogers argues that the answer is magical realism, a genre whose defining characteristic is to make the unbelievable an unremarkable part of everyday life. She pairs classic works by Alejo Carpentier, Gabriel García Márquez, and Rosario Ferré with contemporary novels by Carlos Fonseca, Fernanda Melchor, and Rita Indiana to show how the techniques of magical realism enable new approaches to scenes of environmental collapse and social injustice. Challenging widespread accounts of the genre’s decline, Rogers shows that the signature aesthetics of magical realism—the marvelous, the amazing, the strange—are integral to twenty-first-century fiction.
Table of Contents
Introduction. Why You Should Still Care About Magical Realism
1. Hurricanes, Hauntings, and Posthuman Habitats in the Works of Gabriel García Márquez and Fernanda Melchor
2. Unearthing the Telluric Pulse: From the Marvelous Real to Marvelous Collapse in the Novels of Alejo Carpentier and Carlos Fonseca
3. Exposing the Fictions of Normality: Newly Strange Plantation Disasters from Rosario Ferré to Samanta Schweblin
4. Refusing Servitude Amid Caribbean Disaster: The Complicated Legacy of Lydia Cabrera in Rita Indiana’s Tentacle
Conclusion. Ghost Logs: The Future Afterlives of the Marvelous in Latin American Fiction
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index