Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Arabs and Gabriel García Márquez
View through CrossRef
Abstract
In 2014, newspapers across the Spanish-speaking world covered how the international press paid tribute to García Márquez. Particular attention was given to the extensive eulogies in the Arab press. A special homage was paid to the author’s memory in Saudi Arabia, where the Third South American-Arab Countries Summit was being held at the time. This was not Naguib Mahfuz; this was García Márquez. How was it possible for a Latin American author to become that popular across the Arab world? How was it possible for his novels to be referenced naturally in popular Arab films such as The Embassy in the Building (2005)? Was all this simply due to the fact that in postindependence Latin America, particularly since the 1940s, there has been a growing de-orientalist discourse? Or did García Márquez craft a particular dialogue with the internal and external Arabs? With all this in mind, and by drawing on Latin American (de)orientalism in the works of Kushigian, Nagy-Zekmi, and Tyutina, among others, this article analyzes the dimensions and implications of García Márquez’s depiction of the internal Arab (immigrant in Latin America) in some of his novels as well as his dialogue with the external Arab (the Arab world) in some of his press articles.
Title: The Arabs and Gabriel García Márquez
Description:
Abstract
In 2014, newspapers across the Spanish-speaking world covered how the international press paid tribute to García Márquez.
Particular attention was given to the extensive eulogies in the Arab press.
A special homage was paid to the author’s memory in Saudi Arabia, where the Third South American-Arab Countries Summit was being held at the time.
This was not Naguib Mahfuz; this was García Márquez.
How was it possible for a Latin American author to become that popular across the Arab world? How was it possible for his novels to be referenced naturally in popular Arab films such as The Embassy in the Building (2005)? Was all this simply due to the fact that in postindependence Latin America, particularly since the 1940s, there has been a growing de-orientalist discourse? Or did García Márquez craft a particular dialogue with the internal and external Arabs? With all this in mind, and by drawing on Latin American (de)orientalism in the works of Kushigian, Nagy-Zekmi, and Tyutina, among others, this article analyzes the dimensions and implications of García Márquez’s depiction of the internal Arab (immigrant in Latin America) in some of his novels as well as his dialogue with the external Arab (the Arab world) in some of his press articles.
Related Results
Death following pulmonary complications of surgery before and during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic
Death following pulmonary complications of surgery before and during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic
Abstract
Background
This study aimed to determine the impact of pulmonary complications on death after surgery both before and d...
Gabriel García Márquez and the Remaking of the World Canon
Gabriel García Márquez and the Remaking of the World Canon
Abstract
Given the central role played by One Hundred Years of Solitude in determining what today is understood as postcolonial literature, it may surprise readers o...
Anais do 8º CIRPACfoa - “Prof. Adjunto Osvaldo Magro Filho”
Anais do 8º CIRPACfoa - “Prof. Adjunto Osvaldo Magro Filho”
Periimplantite, realidade na Implantodontia: Qual a melhor conduta? Relato de caso. Adriana dos Santos Caetano, Vinícius Ferreira Bizelli, Paulo Vitor Ogliari, Edgard Franco Moraes...
Scripting Gabriel García Márquez’s Life
Scripting Gabriel García Márquez’s Life
Abstract
Any biographical essay on the famous Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez (1927–2014) must take into account biographies that have already been written—i...
Magical Realism in Ayu Utami’s Simple Miracles and Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude Novel Characteristics of Wendy B. Faris
Magical Realism in Ayu Utami’s Simple Miracles and Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude Novel Characteristics of Wendy B. Faris
This study aims to describe in depth related to (1) the characteristics of magical realism in Simple Miracels and Hundred Years of Silence, (2) The narrative structure of realism a...
Children of Scheherazade: Gabriel García Márquez in Arabic
Children of Scheherazade: Gabriel García Márquez in Arabic
Chapter 3 examines direct reworkings of Gabriel García Márquez’s novels in Arabic literature. The chapter focuses on the Arabisation of the genre of magical realism and a rewriting...
The Later Work of Gabriel García Márquez
The Later Work of Gabriel García Márquez
Abstract
If the Bolívar novel embodies the collective memory of a region in a manner spare yet ingenious, the novelist’s other major late work tends toward personal ...
Spain in the Making and Reception of García Márquez’s Works
Spain in the Making and Reception of García Márquez’s Works
Abstract
Gabriel García Márquez is one of the most beloved and read writers of the last century in Spain. Yet his early literary works went almost unnoticed for more...

