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6 - The Autumn of the Patriarch

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2010

Philip Swanson
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield
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Summary

The Autumn of the Patriarch (El otoño del patriarca, 1975) is a text as robustly resistant to confident evaluation as any other by García Márquez, who described it as 'a poem on the solitude of power', a 'poetic adventure' and a highly personal 'book of confession'. Reminiscing with Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, he situates his intuition of the mystery of power in a scene he witnesses as a reporter in Caracas in 1958 just after the fall of General Marcos Pérez Jiménez: “It was nearly four in the morning, when the door opened and we saw an officer, in combat gear, walking backwards, with muddy boots and a sub-machine gun in his hands . . . pointing with the machine gun, and dirtying the carpet with the mud from his boots. He went down the stairs, got into a car which took him to the airport, and went into exile. It was at that precise moment, when that soldier was leaving a room where the formation of the new government was being decided, that I had the intuition of power, the mystery of power.” / Power is a glass ball in the palm of one's hand, but it may also be a slippery fish 'swimming around without god or law' ('un sábalo vivo que nadaba sin dios ni ley'). The initial inspiration for the aesthetic of The Autumn of the Patriarch was 'the image of an inconceivably old dictator who ends up alone in a palace full of cows'.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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