Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Colonial Tropes and Postcolonial Tricks
- 2 Tropical Nature and Landscape Aesthetics
- 3 Salvaging the Savage
- 4 Paradise Lost: Wilderness and the Limits of Western Escapism
- 5 Jungle Fever: Degeneration as a Trop[olog]ical Disease
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Conclusion
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Colonial Tropes and Postcolonial Tricks
- 2 Tropical Nature and Landscape Aesthetics
- 3 Salvaging the Savage
- 4 Paradise Lost: Wilderness and the Limits of Western Escapism
- 5 Jungle Fever: Degeneration as a Trop[olog]ical Disease
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
El último cable de nuestro Cónsul, dirigido al señor Ministro y relacionado con
la suerte de Arturo Cova y sus compañeros, dice textualmente:
‘Hace cinco meses búscalos en vano Clemente Silva.
Ni rastro de ellos.
¡Los devoró la selva!’ (p. 385).
These are the chilling final lines of La vorágine – a novel which, as I have shown in the previous chapter, epitomizes the maleficent influence of the tropical forest and its power to entrance, corrupt, and even annihilate the urban traveller. The victims of this telluric ingestion are Cova, his girlfriend, their premature baby, and their travelling companions, who disappear without a trace in the midst of the jungle. The use of the verb ‘devorar’ (which shares the same Latin etymology as ‘vorágine’, vorare) is significant. Replete with overtones of excess and gluttony, the verb was commonly used in European travel writing on the Americas to denote the immoderate dietary habits of native populations. In Robinson Crusoe, for instance, the protagonist refers to the ‘Cannibals, or Men-eaters’ who reside on the ‘Savage Coast between the Spanish Country and Brasils’, and who ‘fail not to murther and devour all the humane Bodies that fall into their Hands’. Swift's Yahoos are likewise ‘rendered […] odious’ for their ‘undistinguishing appetite to devour every thing that came in their way’. Taken literally, then, the description of the jungle ‘devouring’ Cova could be regarded as consistent with colonial views of the jungle and its native inhabitants as irredeemably savage.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Colonial Tropes and Postcolonial TricksRewriting the Tropics in the novela de la selva, pp. 147 - 151Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2009