L&L HL I Vacation Read: Chronicle of a Death Foretold

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L&L HL I Vacation Read: Chronicle of a Death Foretold On the day they were going to kill him, Santiago Nasar got up at five-thirty in the morning to wait for the boat the bishop was coming on. He d dreamed he was going through a grove of timber trees where a gentle drizzle was falling, and for an instant he was happy in his dream, but when he awoke he felt completely spattered with bird shit. So begins Marquez s classic novel, published in 1981, but based on a true incident which occurred in a small Colombian town, known as Sucre, in 1951, when Miguel Reyes Palencia, discovering his wife Marguerita was not a virgin, returned her to her mother. Soon after, a man called Cayentano Gentile Climento died at the hands of Victor Chica Sales for having dishonored his sister. Taking the kernel of this story, Marquez weaves a powerful narrative of mystery and intrigue as Santiago Nasar becomes destined to undergo the same fate. Despite its short length, Marquez s masterpiece compresses into its hundred or so pages such themes as machismo (or the ideology of patriarchy); notions of vigilante justice; the oppression of women; the conflict between public duty and private desire; the hand of fate versus ideas of free-will; the loss of individual identity; social change; the role of the Church as a repressive force; colonialism and, finally, the ambiguity of truth, to name but a few of its major concerns! Over the vacation we would like you to do the following: 1. Enjoy reading Marquez s Chronicle of a Death Foretold. Influenced by ideas of magical realism, the book provides a rich mix of different genres and styles including the conquistador s cronicas, investigative journalism, detective fiction (or the whodunit), the epistolary novel and, finally, Greek tragedy. As a result, it lends itself well to a plurality of interpretations. 2. For each of the guiding questions which accompany this Vacation Read, write a sentence or two in response. These will comprise a completion grade on your return in January. 3. Finally, identify three key passages of Chronicle of a Death Foretold (a passage = 2 to 3 pages of text) and annotate them in a very detailed way. Consider such things as the context of the passage in terms of what occurs before and after i.e. the use of juxtaposition or irony; the tone and mood of the passage; the main theme/s of the passage; the characters involved in the section you have identified and what is revealed about them and how; the setting of the passage and how this might relate to theme and character; the literary devices the writer uses, including the use of particular diction or imagery (metaphors, similes etc), the use of symbols, motifs and imagery (look out here for biblical allusions, the symbolic use of names, the imagery of animals, dreams, stage and film, colors, finance, together with the use made of scatalogical and metafictional references); any twists or turning points in the plot. Your annotations should be detailed enough to be able to participate in a class discussion of the passage.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold Study Guide 1. What information does the first paragraph of the novel give us about the story that is going to unfold? 2. Why doesn t Victoria Guzmán warn Santiago Nasar about the men who are going to kill him? 3. What signs does Santiago Nasar overlook that would have forewarned him of the impending crime? 4. What impression does the writer give you of the bishop and of the townspeople s relation to him? 5. How does the writer communicate animosity towards the rich in the novel? 6. Describe the character of Santiago Nasar. 7. What aspects of physical violence do you observe in the activities of the townspeople? Find examples from the book. 8. What precipitates the murder of Santiago Nasar? 9. In what ways are the wedding festivities unusual for the town? 10. What do you learn about the background of Bayardo San Román?

11. What is Bayardo San Román s father known for? 12. How have the Vicario sisters been raised? What is it about them that the narrator s mother notes is particularly unusual and virtuous? 13. What does it show about Bayardo San Román that he buys the house belonging to the widower Xius? 14. What do Angela Vicario's confidantes explain to her about a woman s honor? 15. Why does the narrator s mother consider Angela Vicario s putting on the wedding veil to be an act of courage? 16. Which of the townspeople were forewarned of the murder? What are their reasons for not having spoken to Santiago Nasar about it? 17. How does the writer build suspense about the fate of Santiago Nasar? Why doesn t it matter that you know what has happened from the beginning? 18. Describe the autopsy that is performed on Nasar. Who does it? What is the narrator s opinion of it? 19. What is ironic about the description of Nasar s wounds as stigmata, about the description of his brain made during the autopsy? 20. After the murder and the autopsy, how does everyone recollect their impression of its affect on the town?

21. Who is considered to be the only one who had lost everything? In what why is this accurate or inaccurate? 22. What are the fates of the members of the Vicario family after the murder? 23. What plea do the Vicario twins make at their trial? What is your assessment of the accuracy of this plea? 24. In what ways does Angela Vicario change after the murder? What does she realize about her mother? About Bayardo San Román? How does she deal with this? 25. What is the effect of the murder on the people of the town? How do those who could have done something to prevent it console themselves? 26. What are some of the coincidences that conspired to allow the Vicario brothers to be successful in their murder of Santiago Nasar? 27. What does the magistrate conclude about Nasar s implication in the crime? On what basis does he draw his conclusion? 28. What is the narrator s assessment of Nasar's feelings at the time of his death? 29. What other opinions are expressed on this matter and by whom? 30. What instances are given to show that the Vicario brothers do not want to carry out the murder?

31. How does Santiago Nasar learn that the Vicario brothers are going to kill him? How does he react to this information? 32. Why does Placida Linero, Nasar s mother, bolt the front door of the house? 33. What are Nasar s actions after the Vicario brothers attack is concluded? 34. What effect is achieved by Nasar s long walk into the house? 35. Who do you feel is to blame for the murder?