Thursday, March 12, 2015

What is the meaning of solitude in the novel 100 year of solitude?

Solitude takes on many forms in Marquez's novel.  The
Buendia family retreats into solitude for various reasons.  Jose Arcadio Buendia becomes
obsessed with science and isolates himself from his family, an obsession that eventually
leads to his being tied to a tree.  His son the Colonel becomes isolated by his power.
 He draws a circle around him that he allows no one to enter.  His other son Jose
Arcadio marries Rebecca, and Ursula forces him to live apart from the rest of the family
because she considers his marriage incestuous.


But these
are only a few examples.  Each Buendia in his or her own way eventually becomes isolated
or alienated either from choice or from circumstances beyond his or her control.  Ursula
is example of the latter.  Her old age causes her to shrivel up and eventually become a
plaything for her great children.  Throughout the novel, Marquez explores various ideas
of expansion and isolation, or solitude.  He shows the need to connect with others, but
he also shows the compelling urge to withdraw.  Each Buendia exhibits various
motivations for withdrawing from others--disillusionment (Jose Arcadio Segundo),
sickness (Jose Areliano Segundo), trauma (Meme), purity and extraordinary beauty
(Remedios the Beauty), pretensions (Fernando), incest and lust (Amaranta Ursula),
depravity (Jose Arcadio II).  And this compulsion to withdraw eventually has devastating
effects on the individual.


Incest is one of the key ways
Marquez shows this tendency.  Even though incest is not actually committed except in the
first generation of Buendias and in the last, it becomes a metaphor throughout the novel
for the family's withdrawal from connecting with the outside world--their solitude.
 Colonel Aureliano falls in love with a girl who could be his daughter.  His brother
marries a girl whom his mother and father raised.  Amaranta's nephew wants to marry her.
 We see the family begin to reject outsiders and retreat into themselves.  When incest
does occur at the end of the book between Aureliano and Amaranta Ursula, the family line
ends and the baby who is born with a pig's tail dies and Macondo is
destroyed.


So, in the novel, solitude means withdrawal,
alienation, retreat, and isolation.

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