Short Stories by Latin American Women, with Pilar V. Rotella
Short Stories by Latin American Women, with Pilar V. Rotella
May 1, 2024 @ 1:00-2:15pm
The well-known Chilean novelist Isabel Allende has said that writing a short story “it’s like shooting an arrow. There is no second chance – it’s a make-or-break proposition.” The stories in this collection are like well-aimed arrows that hit important targets in their depiction of women’s lives and women’s role in patriarchal and often constrained conditions, whether by focusing on the common place and the everyday (the real) or on the unusual and the strange (the magical dimension of reality). Navigating between the poles of the magic and the real, these beautifully crafted stories offer an insightful view of complex issues regarding womanhood not only in Latin American society but in the world at large.
Text: Celia Correas de Zapata, ed., Short Stories by Latin American Women Writers: The Magic and the Real
Syllabus: (All stories are available as pdfs; see below.)
May 1:
E. Garro, “Blame the Tlaxcaltecs”
https://www.sweetstudy.com/sites/default/files/qx/15/11/27/10/blame_the_tlaxaltecs.pdf
R. Ferré, “A Poisoned Tale”
http://www.bestshortstories.com/story/234116/the-poisoned-tale/
May 8:
M.T. Solari, “Death and Transfiguration of a Teacher” https://rossdhs.weebly.com/uploads/6/0/5/4/60545961/death_and_transfiguration_of_a_teacher.pdf
A.L. Vega, “Cloud Cover Caribbean”
https://www.sobtell.com/images/questions/1496115546-Encancaranublado.pdf (Scroll down – begins page 106)