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Pedro Páramo

Pedro Páramo is a novel written by Mexican writer Juan Rulfo. The novel tells the story of Juan Preciado, a man who promises his mother on her deathbed to meet Preciado's father for the first time in the town of Comala only to come across a literal ghost town, that is, populated by spectral characters. During the course of the novel, these ghostly inhabitants reveal details about life and afterlife in Comala, including that of Preciado's reckless father, Pedro Páramo, and his centrality for the town.[1][2] Initially, the novel was met with cold critical reception and sold only two thousand copies during the first four years; later, however, the book became highly acclaimed.[3] Páramo was a key influence on Latin American writers such as Gabriel García Márquez. Pedro Páramo has been translated into more than 30 different languages and the English version has sold more than a million copies in the United States.

Pedro Páramo
First edition
AuthorJuan Rulfo
Original titlePedro Páramo
TranslatorMargaret Sayers Peden
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish
PublisherFondo de Cultura Económica
Publication date
1955

Gabriel García Márquez has said that he felt blocked as a novelist after writing his first four books and that it was only his life-changing discovery of Pedro Páramo in 1961 that opened his way to the composition of his masterpiece, One Hundred Years of Solitude. Moreover, García Márquez claimed that he "could recite the whole book, forwards and backwards."[4] Jorge Luis Borges considered Pedro Páramo to be one of the greatest texts written in any language.[5][6]

Plot Edit

Narrative structure Edit

The story begins with the first-person account of Juan Preciado, who promises his mother at her deathbed that he will return to Comala to meet his father, Pedro Páramo. His narration is interspersed with fragments of third-person dialogue from the life of Pedro Páramo, who lived in a time when Comala was a robust, living town, instead of the ghost town Juan now sees. The two major competing narrative voices present alternative visions of Comala, one living and one populated with the spirits of the dead.

The novel is set in the fictional town of Comala and its surroundings, a reference to the real town of Comala in the Mexican state of Colima, close to Juan Rulfo's homeland.

Summary Edit

The sequence of events for the plot is broken up in the work in a nonlinear fashion and is at times difficult to discern and the same occurs with the characters as it is often impossible at first for the reader even to tell which characters are alive or dead.[7][8]

The earliest moment in the story is Fulgor Sedano's arrival at Media Luna. His old patrón, Don Lucas, informs him that his son Pedro Páramo is totally useless and that he should go and get a new job when he dies. Later, Pedro's grandfather dies, and when his family prays for him after his death to help shorten his time in Purgatory, Pedro instead thinks about playing with Susana San Juan, the love of his life. They would fly kites near the village, and Pedro would help Susana fly hers. He is scolded for taking so long in the outhouse by his mother while he recalls this event. Soon after Señora San Juan dies, the San Juan family moves to the mining region. Exploring the Andromeda mine, Señor San Juan lowers Susana at the end of a rope into the old mine shaft. Searching for gold coins, Susana only finds a skeleton. Later in her life, her husband Florencio dies, and she's driven mad by the belief that he's still alive.

When Lucas Páramo is mistakenly killed at a wedding, Pedro later massacres most of the wedding guests. Fulgor Sedano informs Pedro about his father's debts to the Preciado family. To relieve these debts, they concoct a plan to marry Dolores Preciado. When Sedano tries to convince her, she informs him that she's menstruating and cannot be married so soon. Osorio later warns Dolores not to sleep with Pedro on their wedding night, so she begs Eduviges Dyada to sleep with him in her place. Eduviges agrees, but Pedro is too drunk to have sex.

Pedro's son Miguel is killed when, travelling to Contla, he jumps over a fence with his horse. Despite Miguel's cruel and irredeemable nature, Father Rentería absolves him after Pedro pays him in gold coins. Father Rentería remembers how Miguel killed his brother and raped his niece. Dorotea later confesses to Father Rentería that she was trafficking girls for Miguel Páramo; the priest cannot forgive her.

Pedro Páramo seeks to add Toribio Aldrete's land to his estate, and when Toribio visits the home of Eduviges, Pedro Páramo and Fulgor Sedano hang him. Later, Eduviges kills herself out of despair. Living in the Media Luna estate, Dolores Preciado leaves Pedro Páramo to live with her sister.

At the onset of the Mexican Revolution, the countryside has become too dangerous, and the San Juan family returns to Comala. When Señor San Juan dies, his ghost visits the crazed Susana, who only laughs. A stuttering man (Spanish: El Tartamudo) arrives at Pedro's house and informs him that revolutionaries have captured and killed Fulgor Sedano. To protect himself, Pedro invites local revolutionaries to his house for supper, promising them money and support. Pedro informs a revolutionary leader, El Tilcuate, that the money has run out and that he should raid a larger town for supplies.

When Susana San Juan dies, she refuses absolution by the priest, and Father Rentería pretends to give her last sacraments. The people of Comala have a large party, greatly annoying Pedro, who is mourning the loss of Susana. Out of spite, he lets the town die of starvation. The wife of Abundio Martínez, Refugia, dies of this starvation. He heads into town to drink, and finds Damiana Cisneros, the cook at the Media Luna. Abundio Martínez stabs her to death, captured and dragged to the Media Luna. There, Abundio kills Pedro Páramo, revealing that he's an illegitimate son of his. As he dies, he thinks of Susana and sees the ghost of Damiana.

Dolores Preciado dies, and on her deathbed, she charges her son Juan to head to Comala and find his father Pedro Páramo. There, he finds the ghosts of Abundio, Eduviges, and Damiana, who tell him the stories of the town. He meets an incestuous couple, Donis and his sister, and spends the night at their house. Haunted by the ghosts of Comala, Juan dies of fright, buried in a shared grave with Dorotea. Trapped in his grave, he experiences the story and life of Pedro Páramo.

Themes Edit

A major theme in the book is people's hopes and dreams as sources of the motivation they need to succeed. Hope is each character's central motive for action. As Dolores tells her son, Juan, to return to Comala, she hopes that he will find his father and get what he deserves after all of these years. Despair is the other main theme in the novel. Each character's hopes lead to despair since none of their attempts to attain their goals are successful.[9]

Juan goes to Comala instilled with the hope that he will meet and finally get to know his father. He fails to accomplish this and dies fearful, having lost all hope.

Pedro hopes that Susana San Juan will return to him after so long. He was infatuated with her as a young boy and recalls flying kites with her in his youth. When she finally returns to him, she has gone mad and behaves as though her first husband were still alive. Nevertheless, Pedro hopes that she will eventually come to love him. Dorotea says that Pedro truly loved Susana and wanted nothing but the best for her.[9]

Father Rentería lives in hope that he will someday be able to fully fulfill his vows as a Catholic priest, telling Pedro that his son will not go to heaven, instead of pardoning him for his many sins in exchange for a lump of gold.[2]

Ghosts and the ethereal nature of the truth are also recurrent themes in the text.[1][2] When Juan arrives in Comala it is a ghost town, yet this is only gradually revealed to the reader. For example, in an episode with Damiana Cisneros, Juan talks to her believing that she is alive. They walk through the town together until he becomes suspicious as to how she knew that he was in town, and he nervously asks, "Damiana Cisneros, are you alive?" This encounter shows the truth as fleeting, always changing, and impossible to pin down. It is difficult to truly know who is dead and who is alive in Comala.[1]

Sometimes the order and nature of events that occur in the work are not as they first seem. For example, midway through the book, the original chronology is subverted when the reader finds out that much of what has preceded was a flashback to an earlier time.[9]

Interpretation Edit

Critics primarily consider Pedro Páramo as either a work of magic realism or a precursor to later works of magic realism; this is the standard Latin American interpretation.[10][3][11] However, magical realism is a term coined to note the juxtaposition of the surreal to the mundane, with each bearing traits of the other. It is a means of adding surreal or supernatural qualities to a written work while avoiding total disbelief.[1][12][9] Pedro Páramo is unlike other works of this type because the primary narrator states clearly in the second paragraph of the novel that his mind has filled with dreams and that he has given flight to illusion and that a world has formed in his mind around the hopes of finding a man named Pedro Páramo. Likewise, several sections into this narration, Juan Preciado states that his head has filled with noises and voices. He is unable to distinguish living persons from apparitions. Certain critics believe that particular qualities of the novel, including the narrative fragmentation, the physical fragmentation of characters, and the auditory and visual hallucinations described by the primary narrator, suggest that this novel's journey and visions may be more readily associated with the sort of breakdown of the senses present in schizophrenia or schizophrenia-like conditions rather than with magical realism.[12][13]

Meaning of title Edit

It is obvious that the title underscores the importance of the character of Pedro Páramo. Pedro is a very important character, and his life and decisions that he makes are key to the survival of the town of Comala. His last name is symbolic because it means "barren plain" or "wasteland", which is what the town of Comala becomes as a result of his manipulation.[1] He is not only responsible for the economic well-being of the town but also for the existence of many of its inhabitants. His offspring includes Abundio, Miguel, and Juan, along with countless others. He is commonly seen raping women, and even Dorotea cannot keep track of all the women he has slept with.[9] He is also responsible for the security of the town. He strikes a deal with the revolutionary army and does so mainly in his own self-interest and for protection. But being the owner of such a large swath of land, he is, by extension, in charge of the physical well-being of the town.[12][2] An example of his power is when he decides to allow Comala to starve and do nothing with the fields and with the crops. The town withers on his apathy and indifference. The entire work centers around his actions, appetites and desires. He holds the town of Comala in the proverbial palm of his hand.[9]

Characters Edit

Main characters Edit

Pedro Páramo Edit

Pedro Páramo is both protagonist and antagonist since his acts are at cross-purposes. He is capable of decisive action, like when he eliminated his debt and took over more land, but is unable to use that decisiveness to do any good for the community. He is like a tragic hero in the way that he longs for Susana and is totally unable to get over her death. His one fatal flaw is her. He cannot function without her or the incentive of her. Pedro serves as a fertility god figurehead in the work. He not only literally impregnates many of the town's women, but he has many children (the priest brings many to his doorstep). He also is in charge of the well-being of Comala, but also can "cross his arms" and let Comala die. This shows that he has the power of life and fertility over the town. Pedro's name has great significance in the work. Pedro is derived from the Greek petrus, meaning 'rock', and Páramo, meaning 'barren plain'. This is ironic since in the end of the work Pedro collapses "like a pile of rocks" after observing what his land had become.[14]

Susana San Juan Edit

She is the love of Pedro's life. They grew up together. Her mother died friendless, and later her father Bartolomé is killed in the Andromeda mine by Sedano so that Pedro can marry her. She loved her first husband very much and went mad when he died. She thinks that he is still living, and she "talks" to him several times in the work. She appeared to have loved him for his body and not for his personality. She might have had sex with Pedro, but it is apparent that he wanted to have her. They were never married since he had never divorced Dolores. He is full of grief when she dies and refuses to work anymore and lets the town die. She is commonly portrayed and symbolized as the rain and water. In the passages that she is in, there is a backdrop with it raining. Such an example of this is the scene with Justina, Susana, and the cat. The entire background is the rain; it is raining torrents, and the valley is flooded.[14]

Juan Preciado – narrator Edit

Juan is one of the two narrators in the work. He recounts his story for the first half of the work, up until his death.[14] He comes to Comala in order to find his father, his mother's last wish. He finds the town abandoned and dies of fright from the ghosts. He is then buried in the same grave as Dorotea, whom he talks with. It is apparent that he dies without the proper sacraments and is now stuck in purgatory.[2]

Fulgor Sedano – mentor Edit

He is the administrator of the Media Luna. Initially warned by Pedro's father not to trust him, he eventually becomes enforcing hand of Pedro's schemes. He had been around the estate for many years serving the former patrons, Pedro's father Lucas and Lucas's father before that. He knows what to do and how to do it and boasts a number of achievements, including getting Dolores to marry Pedro. He is killed by a band of revolutionaries who view him as an embodiment of the privileged estate that they are fighting against. He also is responsible for having Toribio Aldrete hanged because he was trying to get the land surveyed to prove his right to some of it.[14]

Miguel Páramo Edit

He and Juan are both sons of Pedro Páramo. Miguel is the only son recognized by Pedro and was thus being groomed as the next Páramo heir. Miguel's character is the exact opposite to Juan. He is wild and a rapist, while Juan is quiet and respectful of women. He is fearless, whereas Juan dies of fear. He has a horse and rides it often, whereas Juan does not and has to travel by foot. His wantonness contrasts the calmness of Juan despite their shared parentage. Additionally, he is known for liking loose women and for murdering Ana's father. He also rapes Ana when he goes to her to apologize to her for killing him. He is thrown from his horse when going to another village to meet his current lover.[14]

Dorotea – narrator Edit

Town's beggar. She is the second narrator in the work. She tells the story of Comala before Pedro died after she is buried in the grave with Juan. Her storytelling dominates the second half of the work. She was known for being homeless and living on the charity of the people in the town. She had always tried to have children but had "the heart of a mother but a womb of a whore". She was known for her eccentric behavior by thinking that she had had a baby.[14]

Father Rentería Edit

Town's priest. He is really not the main character, but he possesses all the characteristics of one; for which he could considered an antihero. He tries to stand up to Pedro and not give absolution to his son, Miguel. He has only the best intentions in mind but is unable to carry them out. His brother was killed by Miguel, and his niece was raped by Miguel as well when he came to apologize to her. He takes some gold to absolve Miguel, and he feels poorly about it, throwing himself in a corner and crying to the Lord.[14]

He goes to another town to try to get himself forgiven of his sins so that he could continue to give the sacraments to the people of Comala. The other priest refuses, but they talk about how everything that grows in their region tastes sour and bitter. It is directly Father Rentería's fault that so many souls are stuck in Comala. He had failed in his duty to absolve those people and administer the last rite to them, and thus, they died and were unable to go to heaven. He is later mentioned as having joined the Cristero War.[14]

Minor characters Edit

Eduviges Dyada Edit

Town's prostitute and good friend of Dolores Preciado. They promised to die together and help each other through the afterlife. She had died years ago and greets Juan when he arrives at Comala. She tells him of how she almost "came within a hair of being his mother" since she had to go and sleep with Pedro on their wedding night. She tells of her relationship and relations with Miguel Páramo and how it was she who saw his ghost before it left. Her sister, María Dyada, tells the priest that her suicide was out of despair and that she was a really good woman. He refuses to help her, and thus, her ghost remains in the town and purgatory. She dies with the idea that Abundio is a good man and does not know about him murdering Damiana.[14]

Dolores Preciado Edit

She was Juan's mother. She was wooed into marriage to Pedro by Sedano who said he thought of nothing but her all day and night and that her eyes were beautiful. Pedro owed her family the most money of all the other families, and her sisters had already moved to the city. She was married to annul the debt. Later, she is staring at a buzzard and wishes to be like it so that she could fly to her sister in the city. Pedro gets mad enough and dismisses her for good. They are never officially divorced. Her dying wish is for Juan to go and see his father and "make him pay for all those years he put us out of his mind".[14]

Abundio Martínez Edit

He's another illegitimate son of Pedro's who works as the town's mail carrier. He is deaf because a rocket once went off near his ear. After that he did not talk much, and he became depressed. Later, his wife dies. He goes to get drunk at a local bar. Upon leaving he sees Damiana Cisneros and asks her for some money to bury his wife. He startles her, and she begins to scream. He then kills her, is captured, vomits, and is dragged to town. Eduviges calls him a good man.[14]

Inocencio Osorio Edit

He is the town's seer. He is the one who tells Dolores not to sleep with Pedro on her wedding night. His nickname is "Cockleburr" since he is well known to be able to stick to any horse and break it.[14]

Damiana Cisneros Edit

She is the cook at the Media Luna and the ghost who takes Juan from Eduviges's house on that first night. She is sad to hear that Eduviges is still wandering the earth. Juan takes a while to realize that she is really a ghost and for a time, thinks that she is still alive. She was murdered by Abundio. She was also one of Dolores's good friends, and Juan knew about her when he arrived at Comala.[14]

Toribio Aldrete Edit

He is a property surveyor. He was splitting and dividing up Pedro's land and was going to build fences. He is stopped by a plot by Pedro and Sedano. They plot to try to stop him from doing the survey and draw up a warrant against him. Sedano goes to Eduviges's house one night with a drunken Aldrete and hangs him and throws away the keys to the room. He remains there in spirit and wakes Juan on his first night in Comala with his death screams.[14]

Donis and his wife/sister Edit

These two are some of the last living people in the town. Donis is suspicious of Juan and his motives for being there and thinks that he is a serious criminal, perhaps a murderer, and does not want him to spend the night. Donis is engaged in an incestous relationship with his sister, started in an attempt to repopulate the town, although they once asked a bishop riding through town to marry them which he furiously refused, demanding they stop their relationship and "live like men". His wife/sister starts to like Juan after the first night and does a little extra to try to get him some more food since they have so little. She trades some of the old sheets for food and coffee with her older sister. Donis is glad that Juan showed up since he could now leave the town and have his wife/sister taken care of.[14]

Justina Edit

She is Susana's caregiver. She has taken care of her for many years, since she was born. She cried when Susana was dying, and Susana told her to stop crying. Justina is scared one day by the ghost of Bartolomé, who tells her to leave the town since Susana would be well cared for.[14]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Cluff, Benjamin H.; et al. (thesis presented to George C. Stallings as chair of department) (18 November 2009). Remembering the Ghost: Pedro Páramo and the Ethics of Haunting (PDF). BYU Department of Spanish and Portuguese (MA (Master of Arts)). Dissertations and Theses. Vol. 1936. Provo, Utah, United States of America: Brigham Young University. ISSN 2572-4479 – via BYU ScholarsArchive.
  2. ^ a b c d e Eckert, Ken (1 October 2011). Kwak, Jae-Sung; Lim, Taekyoon; Seo, Ji-Hyun; Kim, Won-Ho; Kim, Myung-Hye; Kim, Chong-Sup (eds.). (PDF). Asian Journal of Latin American Studies. Seoul, South Korea: Latin American Studies Association of Korea (LASAK). 24 (4): 73–83. ISSN 2287-920X. OCLC 809386948. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2017.
  3. ^ a b Zepeda, Jorge (2005). Venegas, Socorro; Buiza Figueroa, Maricel; Botello López, Elsa; Cabrera Camacho, Victor Hugo; Chavelas Peña, Rosalía; Zama Garza, Patricia; Sánchez Hernández, María Guadalupe; Alonso Yodu, Odette (eds.). La recepción inicial de Pedro Páramo (1955-1963) (in Spanish). Ciudad de México, Mexico: Dirección General de Publicaciones y Fomento Editorial (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)/Fundación Pedro Páramo. p. 378. ISBN 9789703216680.
  4. ^ Lewis, Jim (10 March 2008). Hohlt, Jared; Benedikt, Allison; Bennett, Laura; Check, Dan; Matthews, Susan; Levin, Josh (eds.). . Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. OCLC 728292344. Archived from the original on 5 January 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  5. ^ Saadi, Suhayl (23 October 2011). Broughton, Christian (ed.). "Book Of A Lifetime: Pedro Páramo, By Juan Rulfo". The Independent. London, United Kingdom. ISSN 0951-9467. OCLC 185201487. Archived from the original on 2022-05-25. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Jorge Luis Borges Selects 74 Books for Your Personal Library | Open Culture". Retrieved 2023-02-23.
  7. ^ Leal, Luis (1 January 1964). Lope Branch, Juan M.; Soler Arechalde, María Ángeles; Campos Guardado, María del Refugio; Pérez López, Julio; Reyes Coria, Sergio; Shuttera, Alejandro (eds.). . Anuario de Letras. Lingüística y Filología (in Spanish). Ciudad de México, Mexico: Centro de Lingüística Hispánica "Juan M. Lope Blanch" del Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)/Dirección General de Publicaciones y Fomento Editorial (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México). IV (1): 287–294. ISSN 2448-8224. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2020. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  8. ^ Ortega, José (1 October 1975). Díez Canedo, Joaquín; Aguirre Beltrán, Gonzalo; Galindo, Sergio; Munoz, Mario; Gómez Aguilar, Luis Emilio; Sánchez, Diana Luz; Martínez, Germán; Guerrero, Jesus (eds.). "Estructura temporal y temporalidad en "Pedro Páramo"" (PDF). La Palabra y Hombre: Revista de la Universidad Veracruzana (in Spanish). Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico: Universidad Veracruzana (UV). 18 (16): 19–26. ISSN 0185-5727. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Anderson, Danny J. (2002). "The Ghosts of Comala: Haunted Meaning in Pedro Páramo (Introduction)". In Rulfo, Juan (ed.). . Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden. Austin, Texas, United States of America: University of Texas Press (University of Texas at Austin). ISBN 978-0-292-77121-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 December 2002.
  10. ^ Stanton, Anthony (1 January 1988). Alonso, Amado; Tenorio Trillo, Martha Lilia; Butragueño, Pedro Martín (eds.). "Estructuras antropológicas en Pedro Páramo" (PDF). Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica (in Spanish). Ciudad de México, Mexico: El Colegio de Mexico. XXXVI (1): 567–606. doi:10.24201/nrfh.v36i1.691. ISSN 0185-0121. JSTOR 40300774. OCLC 795935707.
  11. ^ Fajardo Valenzuela, Diógenes (1 January 1989). Valencia, Margarita; Vasquez Salamanca, Luis Eduardo; Millán de Benavides, Carmen; Hoyos, Camilo; Paredes, Julio; Mejía Muñoz, Luz Clemencia; Miranda Morales, Francisco Javier (eds.). ""Pedro Páramo" o la inmortalidad del espacio" (PDF). Thesaurus: Boletín del instituto Caro y Cuervo (in Spanish). Bogota, Colombia: Instituto Caro y Cuervo. 44 (1): 92–111. ISSN 0040-604X. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  12. ^ a b c Corwin, Jay (1 May 2009). . In Bollig, Ben; Broderick, Ceire; Finnegan, Nuala; Forné, Anna; Levey, Cara; Oxford, Lori; Peate, Ailsa (eds.). Juan Rulfo: Pedro Paramo. ISSN 1747-678X. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 3 July 2021. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Corwin, Jay (1 July 2009). Asimakopoulos, John; Márquez-Aponte, Elsa Karen; Zaidi, Ali Shehzad; Worley, Robert M.; Harden, B. Garrick (eds.). (PDF). Theory in Action. Fair Lawn, New Jersey, United States of America: Transformative Studies Institute (TSI). 2 (3): 87–102. doi:10.3798/tia.1937-0237.09015. ISSN 1937-0229. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 September 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Rulfo, Juan; et al. (Photography by Josephine Sacabo, design by DJ Stout and Julie Savasky) (1 November 2002) [1955]. Anderson, Danny J.; Wittliff, Will (eds.). Pedro Páramo. Texas Pan American literature in translation. Vol. I. Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden (3rd ed.). Austin, Texas, United States of America: University of Texas Press (University of Texas at Austin). ISBN 9780292771215 – via Google Books.

References Edit

External links Edit

  • Pedro Páramo (1967) at IMDb
  • Pedro Páramo (1978) at IMDb
  • Pedro Páramo (1981) at IMDb
  • Pedro Páramo (2004) the theatre by Theatre Formation Paribartak of India
  • Ghosts of Comala (2012), Alex Torío studio album inspired by the novel

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For the film adaptation see Pedro Paramo 1967 film Pedro Paramo is a novel written by Mexican writer Juan Rulfo The novel tells the story of Juan Preciado a man who promises his mother on her deathbed to meet Preciado s father for the first time in the town of Comala only to come across a literal ghost town that is populated by spectral characters During the course of the novel these ghostly inhabitants reveal details about life and afterlife in Comala including that of Preciado s reckless father Pedro Paramo and his centrality for the town 1 2 Initially the novel was met with cold critical reception and sold only two thousand copies during the first four years later however the book became highly acclaimed 3 Paramo was a key influence on Latin American writers such as Gabriel Garcia Marquez Pedro Paramo has been translated into more than 30 different languages and the English version has sold more than a million copies in the United States Pedro ParamoFirst editionAuthorJuan RulfoOriginal titlePedro ParamoTranslatorMargaret Sayers PedenCountryMexicoLanguageSpanishPublisherFondo de Cultura EconomicaPublication date1955Gabriel Garcia Marquez has said that he felt blocked as a novelist after writing his first four books and that it was only his life changing discovery of Pedro Paramo in 1961 that opened his way to the composition of his masterpiece One Hundred Years of Solitude Moreover Garcia Marquez claimed that he could recite the whole book forwards and backwards 4 Jorge Luis Borges considered Pedro Paramo to be one of the greatest texts written in any language 5 6 Contents 1 Plot 1 1 Narrative structure 1 2 Summary 2 Themes 3 Interpretation 4 Meaning of title 5 Characters 5 1 Main characters 5 1 1 Pedro Paramo 5 1 2 Susana San Juan 5 1 3 Juan Preciado narrator 5 1 4 Fulgor Sedano mentor 5 1 5 Miguel Paramo 5 1 6 Dorotea narrator 5 1 7 Father Renteria 5 2 Minor characters 5 2 1 Eduviges Dyada 5 2 2 Dolores Preciado 5 2 3 Abundio Martinez 5 2 4 Inocencio Osorio 5 2 5 Damiana Cisneros 5 2 6 Toribio Aldrete 5 2 7 Donis and his wife sister 5 2 8 Justina 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditNarrative structure Edit The story begins with the first person account of Juan Preciado who promises his mother at her deathbed that he will return to Comala to meet his father Pedro Paramo His narration is interspersed with fragments of third person dialogue from the life of Pedro Paramo who lived in a time when Comala was a robust living town instead of the ghost town Juan now sees The two major competing narrative voices present alternative visions of Comala one living and one populated with the spirits of the dead The novel is set in the fictional town of Comala and its surroundings a reference to the real town of Comala in the Mexican state of Colima close to Juan Rulfo s homeland Summary Edit The sequence of events for the plot is broken up in the work in a nonlinear fashion and is at times difficult to discern and the same occurs with the characters as it is often impossible at first for the reader even to tell which characters are alive or dead 7 8 The earliest moment in the story is Fulgor Sedano s arrival at Media Luna His old patron Don Lucas informs him that his son Pedro Paramo is totally useless and that he should go and get a new job when he dies Later Pedro s grandfather dies and when his family prays for him after his death to help shorten his time in Purgatory Pedro instead thinks about playing with Susana San Juan the love of his life They would fly kites near the village and Pedro would help Susana fly hers He is scolded for taking so long in the outhouse by his mother while he recalls this event Soon after Senora San Juan dies the San Juan family moves to the mining region Exploring the Andromeda mine Senor San Juan lowers Susana at the end of a rope into the old mine shaft Searching for gold coins Susana only finds a skeleton Later in her life her husband Florencio dies and she s driven mad by the belief that he s still alive When Lucas Paramo is mistakenly killed at a wedding Pedro later massacres most of the wedding guests Fulgor Sedano informs Pedro about his father s debts to the Preciado family To relieve these debts they concoct a plan to marry Dolores Preciado When Sedano tries to convince her she informs him that she s menstruating and cannot be married so soon Osorio later warns Dolores not to sleep with Pedro on their wedding night so she begs Eduviges Dyada to sleep with him in her place Eduviges agrees but Pedro is too drunk to have sex Pedro s son Miguel is killed when travelling to Contla he jumps over a fence with his horse Despite Miguel s cruel and irredeemable nature Father Renteria absolves him after Pedro pays him in gold coins Father Renteria remembers how Miguel killed his brother and raped his niece Dorotea later confesses to Father Renteria that she was trafficking girls for Miguel Paramo the priest cannot forgive her Pedro Paramo seeks to add Toribio Aldrete s land to his estate and when Toribio visits the home of Eduviges Pedro Paramo and Fulgor Sedano hang him Later Eduviges kills herself out of despair Living in the Media Luna estate Dolores Preciado leaves Pedro Paramo to live with her sister At the onset of the Mexican Revolution the countryside has become too dangerous and the San Juan family returns to Comala When Senor San Juan dies his ghost visits the crazed Susana who only laughs A stuttering man Spanish El Tartamudo arrives at Pedro s house and informs him that revolutionaries have captured and killed Fulgor Sedano To protect himself Pedro invites local revolutionaries to his house for supper promising them money and support Pedro informs a revolutionary leader El Tilcuate that the money has run out and that he should raid a larger town for supplies When Susana San Juan dies she refuses absolution by the priest and Father Renteria pretends to give her last sacraments The people of Comala have a large party greatly annoying Pedro who is mourning the loss of Susana Out of spite he lets the town die of starvation The wife of Abundio Martinez Refugia dies of this starvation He heads into town to drink and finds Damiana Cisneros the cook at the Media Luna Abundio Martinez stabs her to death captured and dragged to the Media Luna There Abundio kills Pedro Paramo revealing that he s an illegitimate son of his As he dies he thinks of Susana and sees the ghost of Damiana Dolores Preciado dies and on her deathbed she charges her son Juan to head to Comala and find his father Pedro Paramo There he finds the ghosts of Abundio Eduviges and Damiana who tell him the stories of the town He meets an incestuous couple Donis and his sister and spends the night at their house Haunted by the ghosts of Comala Juan dies of fright buried in a shared grave with Dorotea Trapped in his grave he experiences the story and life of Pedro Paramo Themes EditA major theme in the book is people s hopes and dreams as sources of the motivation they need to succeed Hope is each character s central motive for action As Dolores tells her son Juan to return to Comala she hopes that he will find his father and get what he deserves after all of these years Despair is the other main theme in the novel Each character s hopes lead to despair since none of their attempts to attain their goals are successful 9 Juan goes to Comala instilled with the hope that he will meet and finally get to know his father He fails to accomplish this and dies fearful having lost all hope Pedro hopes that Susana San Juan will return to him after so long He was infatuated with her as a young boy and recalls flying kites with her in his youth When she finally returns to him she has gone mad and behaves as though her first husband were still alive Nevertheless Pedro hopes that she will eventually come to love him Dorotea says that Pedro truly loved Susana and wanted nothing but the best for her 9 Father Renteria lives in hope that he will someday be able to fully fulfill his vows as a Catholic priest telling Pedro that his son will not go to heaven instead of pardoning him for his many sins in exchange for a lump of gold 2 Ghosts and the ethereal nature of the truth are also recurrent themes in the text 1 2 When Juan arrives in Comala it is a ghost town yet this is only gradually revealed to the reader For example in an episode with Damiana Cisneros Juan talks to her believing that she is alive They walk through the town together until he becomes suspicious as to how she knew that he was in town and he nervously asks Damiana Cisneros are you alive This encounter shows the truth as fleeting always changing and impossible to pin down It is difficult to truly know who is dead and who is alive in Comala 1 Sometimes the order and nature of events that occur in the work are not as they first seem For example midway through the book the original chronology is subverted when the reader finds out that much of what has preceded was a flashback to an earlier time 9 Interpretation EditCritics primarily consider Pedro Paramo as either a work of magic realism or a precursor to later works of magic realism this is the standard Latin American interpretation 10 3 11 However magical realism is a term coined to note the juxtaposition of the surreal to the mundane with each bearing traits of the other It is a means of adding surreal or supernatural qualities to a written work while avoiding total disbelief 1 12 9 Pedro Paramo is unlike other works of this type because the primary narrator states clearly in the second paragraph of the novel that his mind has filled with dreams and that he has given flight to illusion and that a world has formed in his mind around the hopes of finding a man named Pedro Paramo Likewise several sections into this narration Juan Preciado states that his head has filled with noises and voices He is unable to distinguish living persons from apparitions Certain critics believe that particular qualities of the novel including the narrative fragmentation the physical fragmentation of characters and the auditory and visual hallucinations described by the primary narrator suggest that this novel s journey and visions may be more readily associated with the sort of breakdown of the senses present in schizophrenia or schizophrenia like conditions rather than with magical realism 12 13 Meaning of title EditIt is obvious that the title underscores the importance of the character of Pedro Paramo Pedro is a very important character and his life and decisions that he makes are key to the survival of the town of Comala His last name is symbolic because it means barren plain or wasteland which is what the town of Comala becomes as a result of his manipulation 1 He is not only responsible for the economic well being of the town but also for the existence of many of its inhabitants His offspring includes Abundio Miguel and Juan along with countless others He is commonly seen raping women and even Dorotea cannot keep track of all the women he has slept with 9 He is also responsible for the security of the town He strikes a deal with the revolutionary army and does so mainly in his own self interest and for protection But being the owner of such a large swath of land he is by extension in charge of the physical well being of the town 12 2 An example of his power is when he decides to allow Comala to starve and do nothing with the fields and with the crops The town withers on his apathy and indifference The entire work centers around his actions appetites and desires He holds the town of Comala in the proverbial palm of his hand 9 Characters EditMain characters Edit Pedro Paramo Edit Pedro Paramo is both protagonist and antagonist since his acts are at cross purposes He is capable of decisive action like when he eliminated his debt and took over more land but is unable to use that decisiveness to do any good for the community He is like a tragic hero in the way that he longs for Susana and is totally unable to get over her death His one fatal flaw is her He cannot function without her or the incentive of her Pedro serves as a fertility god figurehead in the work He not only literally impregnates many of the town s women but he has many children the priest brings many to his doorstep He also is in charge of the well being of Comala but also can cross his arms and let Comala die This shows that he has the power of life and fertility over the town Pedro s name has great significance in the work Pedro is derived from the Greek petrus meaning rock and Paramo meaning barren plain This is ironic since in the end of the work Pedro collapses like a pile of rocks after observing what his land had become 14 Susana San Juan Edit She is the love of Pedro s life They grew up together Her mother died friendless and later her father Bartolome is killed in the Andromeda mine by Sedano so that Pedro can marry her She loved her first husband very much and went mad when he died She thinks that he is still living and she talks to him several times in the work She appeared to have loved him for his body and not for his personality She might have had sex with Pedro but it is apparent that he wanted to have her They were never married since he had never divorced Dolores He is full of grief when she dies and refuses to work anymore and lets the town die She is commonly portrayed and symbolized as the rain and water In the passages that she is in there is a backdrop with it raining Such an example of this is the scene with Justina Susana and the cat The entire background is the rain it is raining torrents and the valley is flooded 14 Juan Preciado narrator Edit Juan is one of the two narrators in the work He recounts his story for the first half of the work up until his death 14 He comes to Comala in order to find his father his mother s last wish He finds the town abandoned and dies of fright from the ghosts He is then buried in the same grave as Dorotea whom he talks with It is apparent that he dies without the proper sacraments and is now stuck in purgatory 2 Fulgor Sedano mentor Edit He is the administrator of the Media Luna Initially warned by Pedro s father not to trust him he eventually becomes enforcing hand of Pedro s schemes He had been around the estate for many years serving the former patrons Pedro s father Lucas and Lucas s father before that He knows what to do and how to do it and boasts a number of achievements including getting Dolores to marry Pedro He is killed by a band of revolutionaries who view him as an embodiment of the privileged estate that they are fighting against He also is responsible for having Toribio Aldrete hanged because he was trying to get the land surveyed to prove his right to some of it 14 Miguel Paramo Edit He and Juan are both sons of Pedro Paramo Miguel is the only son recognized by Pedro and was thus being groomed as the next Paramo heir Miguel s character is the exact opposite to Juan He is wild and a rapist while Juan is quiet and respectful of women He is fearless whereas Juan dies of fear He has a horse and rides it often whereas Juan does not and has to travel by foot His wantonness contrasts the calmness of Juan despite their shared parentage Additionally he is known for liking loose women and for murdering Ana s father He also rapes Ana when he goes to her to apologize to her for killing him He is thrown from his horse when going to another village to meet his current lover 14 Dorotea narrator Edit Town s beggar She is the second narrator in the work She tells the story of Comala before Pedro died after she is buried in the grave with Juan Her storytelling dominates the second half of the work She was known for being homeless and living on the charity of the people in the town She had always tried to have children but had the heart of a mother but a womb of a whore She was known for her eccentric behavior by thinking that she had had a baby 14 Father Renteria Edit Town s priest He is really not the main character but he possesses all the characteristics of one for which he could considered an antihero He tries to stand up to Pedro and not give absolution to his son Miguel He has only the best intentions in mind but is unable to carry them out His brother was killed by Miguel and his niece was raped by Miguel as well when he came to apologize to her He takes some gold to absolve Miguel and he feels poorly about it throwing himself in a corner and crying to the Lord 14 He goes to another town to try to get himself forgiven of his sins so that he could continue to give the sacraments to the people of Comala The other priest refuses but they talk about how everything that grows in their region tastes sour and bitter It is directly Father Renteria s fault that so many souls are stuck in Comala He had failed in his duty to absolve those people and administer the last rite to them and thus they died and were unable to go to heaven He is later mentioned as having joined the Cristero War 14 Minor characters Edit Eduviges Dyada Edit Town s prostitute and good friend of Dolores Preciado They promised to die together and help each other through the afterlife She had died years ago and greets Juan when he arrives at Comala She tells him of how she almost came within a hair of being his mother since she had to go and sleep with Pedro on their wedding night She tells of her relationship and relations with Miguel Paramo and how it was she who saw his ghost before it left Her sister Maria Dyada tells the priest that her suicide was out of despair and that she was a really good woman He refuses to help her and thus her ghost remains in the town and purgatory She dies with the idea that Abundio is a good man and does not know about him murdering Damiana 14 Dolores Preciado Edit She was Juan s mother She was wooed into marriage to Pedro by Sedano who said he thought of nothing but her all day and night and that her eyes were beautiful Pedro owed her family the most money of all the other families and her sisters had already moved to the city She was married to annul the debt Later she is staring at a buzzard and wishes to be like it so that she could fly to her sister in the city Pedro gets mad enough and dismisses her for good They are never officially divorced Her dying wish is for Juan to go and see his father and make him pay for all those years he put us out of his mind 14 Abundio Martinez Edit He s another illegitimate son of Pedro s who works as the town s mail carrier He is deaf because a rocket once went off near his ear After that he did not talk much and he became depressed Later his wife dies He goes to get drunk at a local bar Upon leaving he sees Damiana Cisneros and asks her for some money to bury his wife He startles her and she begins to scream He then kills her is captured vomits and is dragged to town Eduviges calls him a good man 14 Inocencio Osorio Edit He is the town s seer He is the one who tells Dolores not to sleep with Pedro on her wedding night His nickname is Cockleburr since he is well known to be able to stick to any horse and break it 14 Damiana Cisneros Edit She is the cook at the Media Luna and the ghost who takes Juan from Eduviges s house on that first night She is sad to hear that Eduviges is still wandering the earth Juan takes a while to realize that she is really a ghost and for a time thinks that she is still alive She was murdered by Abundio She was also one of Dolores s good friends and Juan knew about her when he arrived at Comala 14 Toribio Aldrete Edit He is a property surveyor He was splitting and dividing up Pedro s land and was going to build fences He is stopped by a plot by Pedro and Sedano They plot to try to stop him from doing the survey and draw up a warrant against him Sedano goes to Eduviges s house one night with a drunken Aldrete and hangs him and throws away the keys to the room He remains there in spirit and wakes Juan on his first night in Comala with his death screams 14 Donis and his wife sister Edit These two are some of the last living people in the town Donis is suspicious of Juan and his motives for being there and thinks that he is a serious criminal perhaps a murderer and does not want him to spend the night Donis is engaged in an incestous relationship with his sister started in an attempt to repopulate the town although they once asked a bishop riding through town to marry them which he furiously refused demanding they stop their relationship and live like men His wife sister starts to like Juan after the first night and does a little extra to try to get him some more food since they have so little She trades some of the old sheets for food and coffee with her older sister Donis is glad that Juan showed up since he could now leave the town and have his wife sister taken care of 14 Justina Edit She is Susana s caregiver She has taken care of her for many years since she was born She cried when Susana was dying and Susana told her to stop crying Justina is scared one day by the ghost of Bartolome who tells her to leave the town since Susana would be well cared for 14 See also EditPedro Paramo 1967 film Notes Edit a b c d e Cluff Benjamin H et al thesis presented to George C Stallings as chair of department 18 November 2009 Remembering the Ghost Pedro Paramo and the Ethics of Haunting PDF BYU Department of Spanish and Portuguese MA Master of Arts Dissertations and Theses Vol 1936 Provo Utah United States of America Brigham Young University ISSN 2572 4479 via BYU ScholarsArchive a b c d e Eckert Ken 1 October 2011 Kwak Jae Sung Lim Taekyoon Seo Ji Hyun Kim Won Ho Kim Myung Hye Kim Chong Sup eds Christian Purgatory and Redemption in Juan Rulfo s Pedro Paramo PDF Asian Journal of Latin American Studies Seoul South Korea Latin American Studies Association of Korea LASAK 24 4 73 83 ISSN 2287 920X OCLC 809386948 Archived from the original PDF on 9 August 2017 a b Zepeda Jorge 2005 Venegas Socorro Buiza Figueroa Maricel Botello Lopez Elsa Cabrera Camacho Victor Hugo Chavelas Pena Rosalia Zama Garza Patricia Sanchez Hernandez Maria Guadalupe Alonso Yodu Odette eds La recepcion inicial de Pedro Paramo 1955 1963 in Spanish Ciudad de Mexico Mexico Direccion General de Publicaciones y Fomento Editorial Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Fundacion Pedro Paramo p 378 ISBN 9789703216680 Lewis Jim 10 March 2008 Hohlt Jared Benedikt Allison Bennett Laura Check Dan Matthews Susan Levin Josh eds The Perfect Novel You ve Never Heard Of Rediscovering Juan Rulfo s Pedro Paramo Slate ISSN 1091 2339 OCLC 728292344 Archived from the original on 5 January 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Saadi Suhayl 23 October 2011 Broughton Christian ed Book Of A Lifetime Pedro Paramo By Juan Rulfo The Independent London United Kingdom ISSN 0951 9467 OCLC 185201487 Archived from the original on 2022 05 25 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Jorge Luis Borges Selects 74 Books for Your Personal Library Open Culture Retrieved 2023 02 23 Leal Luis 1 January 1964 Lope Branch Juan M Soler Arechalde Maria Angeles Campos Guardado Maria del Refugio Perez Lopez Julio Reyes Coria Sergio Shuttera Alejandro eds La estructura de Pedro Paramo Anuario de Letras Linguistica y Filologia in Spanish Ciudad de Mexico Mexico Centro de Linguistica Hispanica Juan M Lope Blanch del Instituto de Investigaciones Filologicas Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Direccion General de Publicaciones y Fomento Editorial Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico IV 1 287 294 ISSN 2448 8224 Archived from the original PDF on 11 August 2020 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Ortega Jose 1 October 1975 Diez Canedo Joaquin Aguirre Beltran Gonzalo Galindo Sergio Munoz Mario Gomez Aguilar Luis Emilio Sanchez Diana Luz Martinez German Guerrero Jesus eds Estructura temporal y temporalidad en Pedro Paramo PDF La Palabra y Hombre Revista de la Universidad Veracruzana in Spanish Xalapa Veracruz Mexico Universidad Veracruzana UV 18 16 19 26 ISSN 0185 5727 Retrieved 3 July 2021 a b c d e f Anderson Danny J 2002 The Ghosts of Comala Haunted Meaning in Pedro Paramo Introduction In Rulfo Juan ed Pedro Paramo Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden Austin Texas United States of America University of Texas Press University of Texas at Austin ISBN 978 0 292 77121 5 Archived from the original PDF on 1 December 2002 Stanton Anthony 1 January 1988 Alonso Amado Tenorio Trillo Martha Lilia Butragueno Pedro Martin eds Estructuras antropologicas en Pedro Paramo PDF Nueva Revista de Filologia Hispanica in Spanish Ciudad de Mexico Mexico El Colegio de Mexico XXXVI 1 567 606 doi 10 24201 nrfh v36i1 691 ISSN 0185 0121 JSTOR 40300774 OCLC 795935707 Fajardo Valenzuela Diogenes 1 January 1989 Valencia Margarita Vasquez Salamanca Luis Eduardo Millan de Benavides Carmen Hoyos Camilo Paredes Julio Mejia Munoz Luz Clemencia Miranda Morales Francisco Javier eds Pedro Paramo o la inmortalidad del espacio PDF Thesaurus Boletin del instituto Caro y Cuervo in Spanish Bogota Colombia Instituto Caro y Cuervo 44 1 92 111 ISSN 0040 604X Retrieved 3 July 2021 a b c Corwin Jay 1 May 2009 Hispanic Writing and Culture of Central America and the Caribbean In Bollig Ben Broderick Ceire Finnegan Nuala Forne Anna Levey Cara Oxford Lori Peate Ailsa eds Juan Rulfo Pedro Paramo ISSN 1747 678X Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 3 July 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Corwin Jay 1 July 2009 Asimakopoulos John Marquez Aponte Elsa Karen Zaidi Ali Shehzad Worley Robert M Harden B Garrick eds Fragmentation and Schizophrenia in Pedro Paramo PDF Theory in Action Fair Lawn New Jersey United States of America Transformative Studies Institute TSI 2 3 87 102 doi 10 3798 tia 1937 0237 09015 ISSN 1937 0229 Archived from the original PDF on 13 September 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Rulfo Juan et al Photography by Josephine Sacabo design by DJ Stout and Julie Savasky 1 November 2002 1955 Anderson Danny J Wittliff Will eds Pedro Paramo Texas Pan American literature in translation Vol I Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden 3rd ed Austin Texas United States of America University of Texas Press University of Texas at Austin ISBN 9780292771215 via Google Books References EditAnderson Danny J 2002 The Ghosts of Comala Haunted Meaning in Pedro Paramo Introduction In Rulfo Juan ed Pedro Paramo Translated by Margaret Sayers Peden Austin Texas United States of America University of Texas Press University of Texas at Austin ISBN 978 0 292 77121 5 Archived from the original PDF on 1 December 2002 Zepeda Jorge La recepcion inicial de Pedro Paramo 1955 1963 Mexico Fundacion Juan Rulfo Editorial RM 2005 378 pp ISBN 968 5208 44 1 External links EditPedro Paramo 1967 at IMDb Pedro Paramo 1978 at IMDb Pedro Paramo 1981 at IMDb Pedro Paramo 2004 the theatre by Theatre Formation Paribartak of India Ghosts of Comala 2012 Alex Torio studio album inspired by the novel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pedro Paramo amp oldid 1172637127, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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