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Catholicism in One Hundred Years of Solitude

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1493-1800s Colonial era and period of introduction of Catholicism. Church and ... bones, frothing at the mouth like a dog, and drowning in moans of agony' (241) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Catholicism in One Hundred Years of Solitude


1
Catholicism in One Hundred Years of Solitude
Patricia Clevenger and Christina Echternach
2
History of the church
  • 1493-1800s Colonial era and period of
    introduction of Catholicism
  • Church and state same thing
  • Catholic ideals legitimized colonialism and
    indigenous repression
  • Bartolomé de Las Casas
  • Cultural Collisions and trans-cultural
    Catholicism
  • Early to late 1800s (1819)
  • Independence and breakdown of Catholic rule
  • A time of hostility and tension between secular
    state and the Catholic Church.
  • Late 1880s to 1950s Neo-Christendom The Catholic
    church attempts to regain privileges.

3
Expected Gender Roles in Catholicism
Women
Men
  • Semidivinity, moral superiority and spiritual
    strength (Stevens 94).
  • Rigid adherence to Catholic morals
  • Submissive Beneath the submissiveness, however,
    lies the strength of her conviction (95).
  • Sadness
  • Premarital chastity post-nuptial frigidity (96)
  • Buendía Men
  • Lack spiritual stamina 95
  • Sinful (in this life)
  • Simple
  • Stubborn
  • Aggressive (sexually and physically)

4
Aspects of Catholicism in Macondo
  • Women perpetuate Catholicism
  • Úrsula- enduring pillar of the
  • Buendía family
  • Chastity belt
  • Enforcement of Sunday Mass under Arcadios rule
  • Papal education of José Arcadio
  • Fernanda static conservative
  • Her severity made the house a redoubt of old
  • customs in a town convulsed by the vulgarity
    with
  • which the outsiders squandered their easy
  • fortunes (237).
  • Marital nightgown
  • Strict adherence to Catholic rigidity

5
Aspects of Catholicism in Macondo
  • Death
  • Mourning
  • Úrsula ordered a mourning period of closed
    doors and windows, with no one entering or
    leaving except on matters of utmost necessity.
    She prohibited any talking allowed for a year and
    she put Remedios daguerreotype in the place
    where her body had been laid out, with a black
    ribbon around it and an oil lamp that was always
    kept lighted (88).
  • Confession
  • Amaranta answered simply that she did not need
    spiritual help of any kind because her conscience
    was clean (281).
  • Sex
  • Courting Pietro and Rebecca, General Marquez and
    Amaranta
  • Virginity Amaranta
  • Thereupon Amaranta lay down and made
    Úrsula give public give public testimony as to
    her virginity (282).

6
Aspects of Catholicism in Macondo
  • Baptism
  • Baptism of Colonel Aureliano Buendías seventeen
    sons
  • Sin
  • Suicide Father Nicanor was against a religious
    ceremony and burial in consecrated ground. Úrsula
    stood up to him. In a way that neither you nor I
    can understand, that man was a saint, she said.
    So I am going to bury him, against you wishes,
    beside Melquíades grave (110).
  • Adultry Aureliano Segundos relationship with
    Petra Cotes during his marriage to Fernanda.

7
Catholicism in Politics
  • Liberals
  • secular theory - as society modernizes, religion
    becomes less important and organized religion
    declines (Stephens 17).
  • He sequestered Father Nicanor in the parish
    house under pain of execution and prohibited him
    from saying mass or ringing the bells unless it
    was for a liberal victory (104).
  • But were fighting this war against the priests
    so that a person can marry his own mother
    (148).
  • Conservatives
  • Oppose secular theory
  • Closer ties with moral uprightness associated
    with the church
  • The conservatives, on the other hand, who had
    received their power directly from God, proposed
    the establishment of public order and family
    morality. They were the defenders of the faith of
    Christ, of the principle of authority (95).

8
Cardinal Sins in One Hundred Years of Solitude
9
Lust intense, unrestrained sexual craving
  • Meme and Mauricio Babilonia
  • Seventeen sons of Colonel Aureliano Buendía
  • Prostitution Pilar Tenera, Petra Cotes and
    Catarinos Store, French Women
  • Catholicisms Blind eye At the urging of Father
    Nicanor, Don Apolinar Moscote arranged for the
    transfer of Catarinos store to a back street and
    he closed down several scandalous establishments
    that prospered in the center of town (90).
  • Bestiality José Arcadio Segundo and the donkey

10
Gluttonyover indulgence to the point of waste
  • Aureliano Segundo and The Elephant
  • He lost consciousness. He fell face down in the
    plate filled with bones, frothing at the mouth
    like a dog, and drowning in moans of agony
    (241).
  • Aurelaino grey fat, purple-colored,
    turtle-shaped, because of an appetite comparable
    only to that of José Arcadio when he came back
    from traveling the world (255).
  • The bodies of the Aurelianos were no sooner cold
    in their graves than Aureliano Segundo had the
    house lighted up again, filled with drunkards
    playing the accordion and dousing themselves in
    champagne, as if dogs and not Christians had
    died, and as if that madhouse which had cost her
    so many headaches and so many candy animals was
    destined to become a trash heap of perdition
    (235).

11
Greed Hoarding money when it could be given to
the poor the church.
  • Úrsula and her gold stashes
  • José Arcardio and land rights
  • Mr. Brown and The United Fruit Company
  • Colonel Aureliano Buendía
  • No one knew why a man who had always been so
    generous has begun to covet money with such
    anxiety, and not the modest amounts that would
    have been enough to resolve an emergency, but a
    fortune of such mad size that the mere mention of
    it left Aureliano Segundo awash in amazement
    (241).

12
Sloth - the sin of sadness, or laziness,
indolence
  • José Arcadio Buendía
  • Remedios the Beauty

Wrath - Forceful, vindictive anger
  • Arcadio Buendía People who protested were put on
    bread and water with their ankles in a set of
    stocks that he had set up in a school room At
    the head of a patrol he assaulted the house,
    destroyed the furniture, flogged the daughters
    and dragged out Don Apolinar Moscote (105).
  • Colonel Aureliano Buendía
  • Amaranta
  • Banana Massacre

13
Envy
  • Amaranta She knew her sisters character, the
    haughtiness of her spirit, and she was frightened
    by the virulence of her anger (74). (Rebecca
    regarding Amarantas jealously over engagement
    with Pietro Crespi.)
  • Dont get your hopes up, even if they send me
    to the ends of the earth, Ill find some way of
    stopping you from getting married, even if I have
    to kill you (73).

Pride
  • Colonel Aureliano Buendía The omen of the dead
    father stirred up the last remnant of pride that
    was left in his heart, but he confused it with a
    sudden gust of strength (227).

14
Works Cited
  • García Márquez, Gabriel. One Hundred Years of
    Solitude. Trans Gregory Rabassa. Harper
    Perennial, New York 2003.
  • Gill, Anthony James Rendering unto Caesar The
    Catholic Church and the State in Latin University
    of Chicago Press, Chicago 1998
  • Stevens, Evelyn P. Marianismo The Other Face of
    Machismo in Latin America University of
    Pittsburgh Press 1973.
  • Williams, Edward J. The Emergence of the Secular
    Nation-State and Latin American Catholicism
    Compartive Politics vol. 5 (January 1973)
    261-277.
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