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eerik
08-11-2013, 04:34 PM
Can some say is magical realism worth of reading?

holden44
08-11-2013, 05:00 PM
Can some say is magical realism worth of reading?

Go ahead and read some and find out. What do you have to lose?

kev67
08-11-2013, 05:17 PM
What is magical realism.

Charles Darnay
08-11-2013, 09:38 PM
It is a somewhat ill defined genre, because it appeared in different times/cultures and each have shaped it.

Some of the more recognizable authors are:

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Isabel Allende
Salman Rushdie
Murakami

In its simplest form, Magic Realism brings the fantastical or supernatural into the mundane. The fantastical/supernatural is accepted as part of reality - not questioned as in some fantasies or Romances.

Calidore
08-11-2013, 10:33 PM
A related label, though it doesn't completely overlap, is "urban fantasy".

Prince Smiles
08-11-2013, 10:50 PM
Salman Rushdie said that people dismiss the genre after only reading the word Magic, and forget the Realism part.
Two books that I personally found interesting were, The Satanic Verses and The Master and Margarita.

cafolini
08-11-2013, 11:45 PM
It is a somewhat ill defined genre, because it appeared in different times/cultures and each have shaped it.

Some of the more recognizable authors are:

Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Isabel Allende
Salman Rushdie
Murakami

In its simplest form, Magic Realism brings the fantastical or supernatural into the mundane. The fantastical/supernatural is accepted as part of reality - not questioned as in some fantasies or Romances.

Definitely.
You forgot Faulkner in there.

Charles Darnay
08-12-2013, 10:00 AM
I don't know that I consider Faulkner Magic Realism. Again, we're dealing with ill-defined genres, but I place the Gothic (which Faulkner is) separate from Magic Realism.

kev67
08-12-2013, 10:11 AM
In its simplest form, Magic Realism brings the fantastical or supernatural into the mundane. The fantastical/supernatural is accepted as part of reality - not questioned as in some fantasies or Romances.

That is different to what I thought it would be. I thought it might be like something I read in one of Bernard Cornwell's Arthurian books. Any of Morgan Le Fay's spells could have been attributed to luck, freak weather or natural causes, but taken together the coincidences were remarkable.

WyattGwyon
08-12-2013, 10:25 AM
Salman Rushdie said that people dismiss the genre after only reading the word Magic, and forget the Realism part.
Two books that I personally found interesting were, The Satanic Verses and The Master and Margarita.

I think The Master and Margarita is wonderful but it seems quite wrong to classify it as magical realism. One reason is because of the overriding satirical intent which in itself justifies the supernatural without reference to magic. Another is that all of the magic in this case is of the traditional religious kind: Satan and Jesus and witchcraft and so on. And the recounting of the passion of Christ from a new perspective sort of puts it in the realm of parable. Does that make sense?

JCamilo
08-12-2013, 10:42 AM
Magical realism is not really a genre or a moviment, so it can be anything without really being anything.

Charles Darnay
08-12-2013, 12:51 PM
I don't agree with this. Magic Realism is a movement, just as much as Romanticism is. Like Romanticism, Magic Realism has its beginnings in visual art - particularly Franz Roh. From there, it developed in Germany and Italy, and eventually spread - becoming very popular in Latin America.

As far as it being a genre: a think any subgroup of literature that can be categorized based on common elements can constitute a genre.