One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude
One Hundred Years of Solitude
later after having sailed around the world many times and marries
Rebeca. Ursula turns them out of the house, but this does not
stop them from living happily and wellJose Arcadio is a good hunter and
after he usurps lands, they do not suffer for moneyuntil he is mysteriously killed.
Colonel Aureliano Buendia
The younger son of Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula Iguaran. As a
child he had dreams and portents; he is prophetic until death. He
falls in love with Remedios Moscote when she is only nine years
old and loses much of his emotion after her death. Introspective,
studious, and resolutely solitary, he becomes the country's most
notorious rebel after the civil wars start. War has an irrevocable
effect on him and he locks himself up in Melquiades' old
laboratory, making golden fishes and avoiding the world until his
death of old age and grief.
Remedios Moscote
The youngest daughter of Don Apolinar Moscote. She is only nine
years old when Aureliano falls in love with her; they marry after
she reaches puberty. She was a child for a very long time and
after puberty did not shed all of her childish habits. But when she
is married, she behaves with grace and responsibility. She
endears herself to the Buendia family, especially Ursula. She dies
young, due to an internal ailment.
Pilar Ternera
A neighborhood fixture with a special relation to the Buendias. In
the beginning of the book, when she is still young, she takes
many young men to her bed; as the novel progresses she
becomes the enormous matron of a brothel. She reads fortunes
and cards that are often correct although few people heed her
advice. She is the mother of both Aureliano Jose (by Aureliano)
and Arcadio (by Jose Arcadio), although Arcadio never knows that
she is his mother. At different points in the book, the Buendias
come to her for sexual comfort, guidance, and advice.
Amaranta
The daughter of Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula Iguaran. She
never marries and spends most of her life consumed in personal
bitterness towards Rebeca, who first gained the attentions of
Pietro Crespi. Amaranta eventually drives Pietro Crespi to suicide
and wears a black bandage for the rest of her life in contrition.
Lonely all her life, she has relationships with her nephew and
great-great-nephew that are tinged with incestuous feelings. She
receives a preminition of death many years before and dies
perfectly prepared and perfectly at peace.
Aureliano Jose
The son of Colonel Aureliano Buendia and Pilar Ternera. He has an
intensely intimate relationship with Amaranta and wishes to
marry her. Instead, he joins his father and the rebel forces, only to
desert later. He is shot in the back by a government soldier during
an uprising.
Arcadio
The son of Jose Arcadio and Pilar Ternera. He is neglected
throughout most of his childhood. After Colonel Aureliano Buendia
leaves to join the civil war, he rules Macondo as a tyrant,
enforcing the most arbitrary rules he can come up with. He tries
to force Pilar Ternera to go to bed with him; instead she introduces
him to Santa Sofia de la Piedad, who bears him three children. He
is killed by a firing squad when the Liberals lose the war.
Rebeca
She shows up at the Buendia household mysteriously when she is
eight years old, eating earth and bringing the insomnia plague to
Macondo. They raise her as one of their own daughters and she
has an intense, love/hate relationship with Amaranta. Rebeca is
the more beautiful of the two and garners the attention of Pietro
Crespi. They have a perennial engagment, unconsummated for
many years, until she meets Jose Arcadio. She marries Jose
Arcadio and Ursula turns her out of the house in anger for this
disrespectful gesture. After Jose Arcadio's death, she barricades
herself in her house and never comes out again.
Santa Sofia de la Piedad
The mother of Jose Arcadio Segundo, Aureliano Segundo, and
Remedios the Beauty, and the common-law widow of Arcadio.
Strange and solitary. She is a tireless worker for the Buendia
household for more than fifty years. Then one day, when it is clear
to her that the Buendias are on the path to decline and cannot
return, she simply walks out of town and is never seen again.
Plagues
At least two definite plagues come to Macondo: the insomnia
plague and the rains that last for almost five years. Critics go
back and forth on whether or not the invasion of the foreign
businessmen constitutes a third plague, although they certainly
bring death and destruction with them. The first of these plagues
very nearly causes Macondo to lose its memory; the second of
these plagues brings about the eventual downfall of the town.
Essentially, both plagues are dangerous because they prevent
Macondo from staying in touch with reality and the world around
them by plunging them into nostalgia and erasing the town's
memory.
Politics
The twisted and meandering world of politics is under a great deal
of scrutiny in this novel, particularly the chapters that deal with
Colonel Aureliano Buendia. The world of politics is a gloomy one.
There is little difference between the Liberals and the
Conservatives; both parties kill and exploit the people. Although
Marquez has a definite anti-capitalist bent, his purpose in
portraying the politics of the region is not to be polemical.
Instead, he comments on how the nature of Latin American
politics is towards absurdity, denial, and never-ending repetitions
of tragedy.
Modernity
This theme is particularly important for the chapters dealing with
the banana plantation. In the span of only a few years, Macondo
is transformed from a sleepy backwater to a frighteningly modern
town via the influences of technology, economic exploitation and
foreign invasion. But the arrival of new machines and farming
techniques do not make Macondo a better place to live in, in fact
things only get worse. The point of this is that modern technology
is meaningless without a concurrent improvement in ethics, and
"progress" turns brutal without a plan to lessen economic
inequality.
Female Sexuality
Although a lesser theme in the novel, important patterns surface
regarding the theme of women's sexuality. In general, the women
who
have
unconventional
relationshipsRebeca, Petra
women
Carpio.
Cotes
signal