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five categories and subsequently exposes his interpretation of how the themes are inter-related. The five themes are as follows: transplantation, music, architecture, dictatorship, and sex. The first theme, translpantation, refers to the transplantation of an individual or group of individuals from one world to another, as we have seen with the Afro-Haitian slaves in the novel. These translpantations often give rise to confusion in his work, as we have also seen within the cultural conflicts that are created in the novel. Next, the author believes that the theme of music is incorporated to some extent in all of
Carpentier's work because he obtained an education in music, and it is therefore an integral part of his world-view. Architecture is definitely omnipresent in El reino de este mundo, and the author of the article describes it as personified, almost as it it played a role in the drama of Carpentier's novels. Lastly, the themes of dictatorship and sex are interrelated because the author believes the charaters often find solace in sex for the dictatorship that they experience. Although this is a broad discussion of themes as apply to all Carpentier's work, I believe this article provides a good base of a discussion on themes and that the ideas he presents, although general, do apply quite well to El reino de este mundo.
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the
Carpentier's maturity, re-encounter with himself and Latin America to the aesthetics and political themes that appear in the novels published during this time of his life. Second, he characterises the novel "El reino de este mundo" as simple and obsessive, although without giving much description as to why this is. His next point however is on interest for this project. The author mentions that Carpentier uses very many characters, which is a stylistic processus based on baroque writing norms. In fact, Carpentier's characters (as well as places) continuously substitute eachother, and this creates the effect of the reader's expectations continuously being blocked. This relates perfectly to the cyclical conclusion (by TiNoel) discussed in class: man will continue to strive for one thing or another, with the cyclical result that man is never happy with what is achieved (hence pushing mankind forward). For example, one dictatorial leader replaces another, as one period of domination replaces another and one revolution replaces another. The author refers to this style as Carpentier's "barroco-real-marvilloso-latino-americano".
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even street names. This adds to the key blend of marvellous fantasy and historical accuracy. Going beyond concrete spatial and temporal limits there are, according to
Barreda-TomĂĄs, two fundamental questions in the novel: what is man and what is his purpose? The most important aspect of the novel is that the main character is of interest not because of his skin colour, but rather for his human attributes that allow universal reflection beyond the realm of race. In this sense, magical realism is a necessary tool of expression and the technique serves to confront the novelâs hero, better develop his purpose as a man, and advance a simultaneously profound and straightforward understanding of the human experience. The characters in the novel are integral to its understanding. Not only do they highlight the temporal and political context of voodoo and other forces, but they also allow Carpentier to surpass temporal and spatial limitations to reach the ultimate reality of life: the universal essence that lies in every human being.
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Carpentier's thearical work, however it does bring up a point that relates to our article. The author mentions that performances are an "enduring motif" in
Carpentier's work and further relates this to The Kingdom of This World: the conflict between Europeans and Afro-Haitians is presented through an opposition between spectators and performers. He states that the relationship shifts that occur between spectators and the events they witness are key to exploring the viewpoint of the different cultures. He continues with the argument that individual and group identity is forged on "such dramatic dialogues of perception", meaning that theater can represent the cultural conflict in a nutshell. Overall, the author views the novel as an ethnographic work, and lastly briefly mentions TiNoel's transformation from a passive observer to an actor in the performance as he becomes a self-conscious individual.
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different actors: âPower changes hands, but its rules are the sameâ. Another cycle is proposed: one of voyage, where all characters long to return to their original land. These voyages are representative of different kinds of passages: from freedom to slavery, from death to survival, etc. The third motif states that nature becomes an ally of the slaves, and has just as much power as human violence to defeat the
Europeans. Goldberg notes that buildings represent European enterprise, while their ruins symbolize their failure: however, a building can be its own ruin, while a ruin can become a home. The motif of the statue is âin a wider sense, the relation between the living body and its artificial/artistic representationâ. The final motif places the drum as âthe central material component of the African Voodoo cultureâ, which becomes all the more powerful due to the whitesâ ignorance of it.
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privileged descent and was well known within French literary circles. This fact, presumably, helped shaped
Carpentier as a writer. Asturias was regarded as more of an outsider in the European literary circles, and derived his sense of identity from the fact he identified himself with his Guatemalan heritage. Carpentier, on the other hand, seemed to be rather confused about where his literary allegiances were. Due to his upbringing, Carpentier spoke perfect French and was also a gifted writer in his tongue. While writing in the French surrealist tradition would have been entirely feasible, Carpentier chose to cast aspects of his French roots aside in favor of becoming a Spanish-American writer. As Henighan points out in this article, the influence of Carpentier's French heritage, can be seen the Spanish prose of his novels. As mentioned in the summary of
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revolution would entail. The author analyzes the impact of the
Haitian revolution as well as its purpose: he describes it as "the first and most dramatic emergence of the ideal of human rights int he modern world". By this previous statement, the author means that the Haitian revolution was very much unlike the French revolution, which focused on social justice and the American revolution, which focused on ending colonial rule since neither of these revolutions were predominantly focused on ending slavery. The author does not delve into the revolution's portrayal by Carpentier deepely at all, since he examines the revolution as seen by most authors of the time, however he states that Carpentier chose to omit some important official and political figures of the revolution and focus on " the nightmare of history" that the Haitian revolution presented.
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French and German sites and historical events. The author also delves into
Carpentier's education and readings. Although it is a very precise account of Carpentier's life, year by year, it is most likely a suitable article to draw information from regarding the author's life, but not regarding the book directly. In terms of Surrealismo, the author delves into a description of the use of magical realism in the twentieth century and its use by a repertoire of other authors. He does however describe surrealism quite well as being impervious to time, and as something that cannot be described as poetry, religion, or a political party. He states that surrealism is the most antique, constant, powerful, and secret attitude of the human spirit. (pg 323)
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Bosch argues that the fundamental difference between these two concepts is inevitably the notion of progress. Bosch stipulates that, the concept of progress and revolution are tightly linked, and that revolution does not occur without progress. While many latin-american authors explore the theme of revolution and its associated costs and benefits, very few choose to make an ideological distinction between revolution and reaction. Bosch points out that
Carpentier's works reflect his ideological evolution as a writer, and that this evolution can be seen most clearly in Carpentier's perspective on revolution. For the purposes of our upcoming work, the most poignant aspect of this article is the discussion of Carpentier's perspective in
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stumbled upon a gem with the Paul B. Miller article. It definitely offers the most innovative and interesting analysis of El reino. I'm starting to get a good flavor of the important themes in the book, and some of the rhetorical strategies that
Carpentier used to enrich his prose. My portion of the bibliography is accessible on my user page (just click my name and it should take you there). In the event that you guys want to consolidate everything on one page, we can just devote this section of the talk page to that - just edit this section then copy/paste your contribution below mine. I'll begin by spamming my stuff:
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1744:âÂĄEcue-Yamba-O!â is a semi-documentary piece about the magical and primitive world of a sector of the black Cuban population. It includes a complete and pure representation that is unregulated by official white culture and a focal point of the novel is the theme of cycles. According to Barreda-TomĂĄs there is a three-part division of the text (childhood, adolescence, and adulthood) and Carpentier employs a literary technique of progressive intensification that suggests an image of concentric rings gradually expanding.
1670:âCarpentier never fails to stress the irony of human destiniesâ, by portraying history as nothing more than an endless cycle with different protagonists at different points in time. Pontiero posits that Carpentier was highly influenced by satirical writing of the eighteenth-century, as evidenced by the irony in his grotesque and malicious descriptions of the French. In regards to voodoo, the article stresses âa firm belief in the unalterable laws of Manâs conditionâ.
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in this sense that the author considers Afro-Caribbean music as prospective. Meanwhile, in the European tradition, music is something that is historical, that is meant to be created and marked in history for others to discover - retrospective. Miller takes an innovative approach to explaining they way in which music amplifies the apparent rift and friction between Afro-Caribbean and European cultures, and the significance of this subtle detail in
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events, which were in many cases "reactions" to prevailing circumstances in society. The end result of which never truly produced progress, but instead produced cyclical violence that resulted in societal retrograde. Furthermore, this article offers a very lengthy analysis of the salient feature's of Carpentier's prose which would be a suitable source for a general subsection within our main article.
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of state directs the body, the mouth represents public speakers, and workers are symbolized by the hands, due to their work, or the feet, since they keep the body up. The political body, which stands for the governing power, deteriorates as power is lost. Revolution is characterized by mutilation, poisoning and disembodiment.
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Cervantes has his characters flee to Christian lands, Carpentier praises the Haitian struggle against the Europeans. Finally, it is stated that âmetamorphosis and transvection are simply the weapons used to fightâ, which is what Ti Noel discovers at the end: metamorphosis is a tool to battle injustice, not flee it.
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in mind. I'll do this shortly (if not over the weekend, then early next week), and post a sort of pre-review review below. Please bear in mind that because Good articles are reviewed by individual reviewers with differing approaches, my thoughts might not be 100% in line with what you'll get when you
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Sokoloff identifies a series of patterns in the novel: the unconventional retelling of history, with gaps in time and changing perspectives; the perception of history as cyclic; the juxtaposition of fact and fiction. His âexperiment with nonlinear organization ⊠corresponds to a major, contrary shift
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The article begins by highlighting Carpentierâs admiration for Cervantes, and his specific mention of the character of Rutilo in the prologue to the novel. De Armas continues by describing lo real maravilloso and how it stems from the very belief in it. The marvellous, according to de Armas, âappears
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This article provides us with a broad view of a certain period of Carpentier's life, analyzing al of his work during the time frame, none of which in great detail. However, the author's analysis pertaining to El reino de este mundo is nonetheless very interesting and useful. First, the author relates
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He illustrates that Carpentier often uses metonymy in his works and music is the vessel through which this idea is conveyed. To the slaves and Afro-Caribbean population music is not only a tribute to their African roots, but also something that is to be passed forward to subsequent generations. It is
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Bosch argues that this work, in particular, is a clear example of Carpentier providing literary commentary on the reactionary nature of the Haitian revolution. Carpentier's account of the "revolution" definitely does not constitute progress in any sense of the word; rather, it was a series of violent
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right now, so that each person becomes a sort of "expert" in one area and can read articles more easily since they will all be on a common topic (thus become familiar with technical terms pertaining to that area, if any, etc). Just a logistical thought that may save us time in the future, let me know
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Barreda-TomĂĄs often expands upon Carpentierâs own commentary surrounding his works and thus lends credence to his analysis. It is otherwise a very well constructed piece that offers excellent insight into both Carpentier novels from the perspective of the inclusion of black characters and themes and
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VĂ©lez-Sainz argues that Carpentier uses the political body metaphor along with carnival to compose the cycles of changing power in his novel. The metaphor of the political body works by synecdoche, in which members of the social body are identified by the body part which characterizes them: the head
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This article contains a very brief yet interesting (and helpful) discussion of the themes that appear in Carpentier's work. These are very broad and apply to his work in general, however they relate quite well to the themes we have seen in El Reino de Este Mundo. The author separates the themes into
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There's also quite a few (lenghty) books about the Haitian revolution if we wanted to provide some background information for our project. If we plan on using any of these books we'll have to act fast and put in a request to get them at the library because it seems we're not the only ones interested
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Example: the 'marvellous' is recurring theme is mentioned many times but not explored until near the end of the article. I wonder if there's a way to either give a brief explanation earlier in the article and/or to indicate that the word is being used in a particular sense (note that I placed it in
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Plagiarism/copyright violations: I sincerely hope this comment doesn't offend anyone - that's not my intention at all - but the article needs to be thoroughly checked that it doesn't either directly reproduce another writer's words or paraphrase them too closely. I'm not implying this has happened,
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In contrast to the intense single character focus of his first novel, Carpentier offers a diversified understanding of black society and their beliefs in âEl reino de este mundoâ. There exists remarkable respect for accuracy on all sides including historical facts, character names, place names, and
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The author defines three main strands of narrative in the novel. The first includes the history of Haiti: the abolition of slavery, the uprising, Henri Christopheâs reign, etc. The second strand deals with âthe spirit and culture of eighteenth-century France transplanted to a prosperous Haitiâ. The
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This 117 page articles serves as a very lengthy and incredibly detailed description of the Carpentier's life and possible influences. It presents lists of authors, poets, ballets, painters, various artists and musicians and places by which he may have been influenced, however most of these refer to
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Bosch's article gives quite a detailed account and analysis of the thematic and stylistic commonalities in Carpentier's collective works. Most interestingly is the rather lengthy discussion in the beginning of the article of the distinction between what distinguishes revolutionary from reactionary.
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is rich with examples of hybridization. Specifically, Kefala develops the idea that the interaction between what is distinctly colonial and what is distinctly "negro" results in the creation of a third "hybrid" entity in the novel, that is neither colonial, nor negro, but simply the "other." Kefala
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Hi Svetlana, hope you don't mind me jumping in :) I think that's a really good idea. The actual technical process of uploading photos is fairly easy... but what happens around that process is hugely important. Knowledge has very strict copyright rules involving images, so before you upload anything
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It looks like Max has abandoned us, probably for a Spanish project page, which means we're down to 4. We have a total of 254 pages to get through, which means 63.5 per person. Keep that in mind when choosing articles... or just send me an e-mail and i'll get back to you with random articles, but we
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This article attempts to trace and analyze the development and evolution of Carpentierâs inclusion of black characters and themes in his work and their literary purpose. The author tells of early influences and hints at an almost excessive enthusiasm for black Cubans being the result of widespread
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I know Chris and I have been communicating, but I don't think anyone decided to claim any specific articles. Chris is going to prepare the first 6 articles from the list and I decided to do the last 6 from the list. Avneet and Svetlana, if you guys can tackle the remainder (6 articles) it would be
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Hey groupies! I think our little chat today in class was pretty good, I'm looking forward to working with all of you throughout the term. As a follow up, I checked out the Carpentier group's page and they are most definitely responsible for sniping some of the books that we're interested in - I'll
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The primary focus of this article is the interpretation of Carpentierâs âLos pasos perdidosâ (1953) and the manner in which Carpentier leaves behind the tacit comedian and master of allegory so strongly felt in earlier fictions such as âEl reino de este mundoâ (1949). A key factor for GonzĂĄles is
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The article highlights the relation between the novel and other texts, which Carpentier alludes to in his prologue. A number of works which influenced him are listed, such as âLe torrentâ by Dominique Hypollyte and âThe Magic Islandâ by William Seabrook. Further, the author claims that historical
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Goldberg states that there is a cycle of order and disorder; order contains many internal disruptive components, such as injustice, as well as external disruptive components, or disorder. Disorder may succeed long enough to produce a new order, however, the exact same pattern is repeated but with
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This article provides a concise historical perspective of the Haitian revolution. The author's main point while describing Haiti's revolutionary state of affairs is that Haiti was the second nation to rebel, and was therefore aware of the total transformation of social and economic order that the
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Sup dudes. So I tackled the last six articles from our list and ran into some interesting stuff, and some not so interesting stuff. Sadly, I had to axe two of the articles from the list as they really didn't have any information that was specifically applicable to our topic. I definitely think we
1134:). However, the image will need to be low-resolution (ie smallish), and preferably of a notable version of the book (perhaps the first edition?) We might also get away with a second image for the first edition of the English-language translation (assuming there is one, you know better then I do!).
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Example of a sentence that could be split: "This work was overall well-received and much attention has been paid to Carpentier's inclusion of magical realism in the novel, however some aspects of his style have been ignored by the academic community." ('however' is also the most overused word on
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Paul B. Miller's article offers an extremely interesting interpretation of Carpentier's writing. Miller explains that the temporally opposing forces of prospective Afro-Carribean culture and retrospective European culture play a significant role in Carpentier's writing. More specifically, Miller
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Referencing: the GA criteria call for "in-line citations from reliable sources for direct quotations, statistics, published opinion, counter-intuitive or controversial statements that are challenged or likely to be challenged". There are a number of assertions in the article that could do with
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Example of over-complex writing: "In this spectacle situation, Carpentier is able to juxtapose the Europeans' experience of Mackandal's body falling into the flames with the autocthonous (Afro-Haitian) experience of Mackandal's body flying off the stake." Without additional explanation we can't
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The use of such tropes increases the irony in the work, as they help to characterize people as immutable and constantly repeating history. Furthermore, they serve to juxtapose contradicting beliefs, such as voodoo and Christianity, which help to explain the irony in the very title of the novel.
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Metaphor, however, is still used and is an important source of irony and humour. Metaphor and metonymy complement each other in the novel, since the former synthesizes new meaning, creating some inconsistencies, while the latter assumes previous knowledge and reduces incompatibilities. Metonymy
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The article argues that Carpentierâs conception of history based on repetition follows a pattern of intratextual repetition. This pattern is analyzed in six different motifs: order and disorder, power and powerlessness; voyage and exile; nature versus establishment; constructions and ruins; the
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Instead the author discusses the origins, styles and motivational differences between Asturias and Carpentier. While both authors spent time in Paris during the height of the French surrealist era, they were both had vastly different experiences. Unlike Asturias, Carpentier was born of a rather
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Hi guys!! thanks for all the great work so far first of all. As for the articles, I am working on the next 4 after Chris's (articles 7, 8, 9, 10) as well as the two other ones that I have posted under one of my previous posts. Please let me know if I can help someone else, I can read a few more
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Hello everyone! Chris, I must commend you on the work you've done so far. I've been battling some tonsillitis for the past few days - it hasn't been pretty. Anyway, I got a chance to look over the list you compiled so far, it looks great. I ran a search on metalib for articles and it seems like
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Carnival, however, serves as another form of revolution. Carnival is the time where opposites reign, which becomes quite literally the case in Carpentierâs book: the blacks take over, and then in another twist, the blacks begin mistreating each other. Elements of carnival are also represented:
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The author of this article discussses Carpentier's strive to inquire into subjectivity and identity throughout his works. According to Unruh, Carpentier analyzes the way people imagine themselves and others within a "culture specific contingent world". The larger part of the article focuses on
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the idea of hybridization is also extremely common across Carpentier's works. The most notable insight that this article provided is that Carpentier's uses hybridization to provide himself with a sense of identity that lies somewhere between his French colonial heritage and his Spanish-America
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This brief article discusses the idea of cultural translation and its related effects, citing the works of Borges and Carpentier as examples. Cultural translation is a theory originally propsed by Homi K. Bhabha. In the simplest sense, cultural translation refers to the process of morphing, or
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The annotated bibliography is due on Monday, Feb. 8th (that's 2 Mondays from now). How about we set the deadline to read everything as next Monday. This way we'll finish all our articles/books by the end of the weekend, which gives us time to discuss anything that needs discussing and get work
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The article tackles each of these strands in turn, analyzing them in terms of their contribution to the human comedy in the book. Pontiero highlights Carpentierâs âjuxtaposition of historical and fictional material worksâ, and analyzes his choice of what to focus on. Furthermore, he notes how
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Both Cervantes and Carpentier situate marvellous occurrences in exotic lands, whose culture is alien to Western Europeans. It is further argued that âthe marvellous environment is of demonic origin in both worksâ, with their execution being impacted by the authorsâ differing ideologies: while
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GonzĂĄles concludes his work with a relatively lengthy criticism of an essay by Victor Volek and discussion of the temporal scheme in âLos pasos perdidosâ. Although this article is not primarily concerned with âEl reino de este mundoâ the idea of exploring Carpentierâs work from entirely new
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This article is useful when considering âEl reino de este mundoâ because it offers avenues to explore further all works of Carpentier. GonzĂĄles suggests that future studies would benefit from the consideration of underlying historical and biographical elements. There may be themes yet to be
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Paravisini-Gebert begins by stating that when Carpentier wrote the The Kingdom of this World he had âjoined a widespread movement whose purpose was âa search for origins, the recovery of history and tradition, the foundation of an autonomous American consciousness serving as the basis for a
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Wikilinking: internally linking words is only necessary on their first occurrence, and then only when they add value to the article. Examples: Haitian Revolution is linked multiple times whereas terms like "hybridization", "voodoo" etc that a reader may wish to look up in more detail
1399:"translation" information from a foreign source so that it becomes relevant and significant for a new specific culture. According to Bhabha, the process of cultural translation is also intimately linked to the idea of hybridization. In the article, Kefala argues that Carpentier's
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explicit citations and perhaps even attribution; it can be helpful to our readers to indicate whose opinion we are reproducing. This is a general point - many of the article's statements are quite forthright, so we really ought to know whose thoughts they are. See
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analysis of the narrating self and implied author; he feels that there is a hidden agenda of confession behind layers of fiction. Later there is a contrast between the popularity, the artistic achievement, and the confessional reading of âLos pasos perdidosâ.
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discrimination. Barreda-TomĂĄs goes on to compare Carpentierâs first novel, âÂĄEcue-Yamba-O!â (1933), and what he describes as Carpentierâs first mature novel, âEl reino de este mundoâ (1949), with a focus on the treatment and inclusion of the black man.
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Example: "This adds to the key blend of marvellous fantasy and historical accuracy." needs a cite, and might benefit from being written something like "According to X, this adds to the key blend of marvellous fantasy and historical
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in his prose, away for metaphor and toward metonymyâ. It is argued that metonymy helps to preserve links of cause and effect and allows the author to restrict his field of reference to that which can be understood by his audience.
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states "Writing should be clear and concise. Articles are supposed to introduce readers to topics, or remind them of what they had half-forgotten: it is not their purpose to dazzle readers with editors' learning or vocabulary.
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Hello all! I'm one of the Knowledge 'regulars' who have volunteered to assist with this WikiProject. I'm available to offer help and advice with most aspects of working in the Knowledge environment, from the technical parts of
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fact in the novel is manipulated in order to achieve the connection between history and the marvellous. Finally, Carpentierâs treatment of certain historical figures is analyzed, including Toussaint, Dessalines, and Pauline.
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For the author's image, you can check Knowledge to see if we already have an article about him and if there's a picture we can reuse, or maybe search through online Public Domain image archives. There are some suggestions at
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Because the article is about the book "The Kingdom of this World", I think we can justify a fair-use image of the book cover under the "image is used in the context of critical commentary of that item" clause (see
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literature faithful to the New Worldâ.â She further observes that the connection between history and magical faith was of great interest to Carpentier, since it represented the very opposite of Western beliefs.
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great job finding articles, I pretty much found all the same ones as Chris, plus two that don't seem to be in his list. As we discussed in class I can read these two and as many as are needed from Chris' list.
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you've pretty much collected all the useful articles that are readily available to us. In terms of books, here's a list of some that I think might be worth taking a look at (all are available at Koerner):
912:(I just checked out the reviews... they're all pretty useless and add nothing really). Let me know which you want, and I'll send them over so we can see if they really will be useful. I'll look for more.
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sculpture; the drum and the thunder. Furthermore, three culminating episodes are named, in which the motifs above cluster: the death of Henri Christophe, the death of Soliman, and the death of Ti Noel.
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The following is based on the six GA criteria, and would be what I'd mention if I was reviewing the article. I may add to this as I re-read the article, but I think it'll do for an initial assessment.
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848:. The cite can simply be a parenthesised note at the end of your sentence/paragraph stating the book+author+publisher+date+page reference for now, though if you want to have a go at using our
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serves some the purposes of defamiliarizing situations through its elliptical qualities. It is also used to dehumanize characters and emphasize the larger group to which they belong.
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has set the deadline for Wednesday the 20th for our initial round of sources to be posted. So, the aim is to start editing and going through our sources in the next week. Cheers. --
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further argues that the third hybrid entity is best described as an example of cultural heresy; in the sense that the hybrid entity is in fact a departure from its cultural origins.
1913:) there are restrictions on where and when they can be used. It's not worth going into that in detail now - personally I'd probably just wait and see what the GA reviewer thinks.
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Once you've found some suitable images, if you want to post a link(s) here I'll be happy to double-check them and help out with the actual upload if you like. Hope this helps,
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Hope this helps. You're doing a really superb job with this and I look forward to seeing how it develops. If you need more detailed explanations or anything else, just ask :)
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costumes are substituted by metamorphoses. Further, the carnivalesque tradition of mocking the king is present when Ti Noel becomes a sort of king in his own pseudo-kingdom.
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works best: avoid jargon, vague phrases, and unnecessary complexity." One school of thought is that we should where possible write as though for an intelligent 12-year old.
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I've taken a look at a few articles to make sure they are relevant, and they are, so if we need 6 articles per person, here are my 6, chosen randomly (the first 6 listed).
1830:, but hopefully I can give some useful guidance and an indication as to how close you are and what (if anything) needs to be addressed before going for the actual review.
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This article will have to be removed from our list as although El reino de este mundo is mentioned in the introduction, this article focuses on other work by Carpentier.
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is a page by UBC students that reached featured article status. It is also based on a book, and I think the general scheme of it is a good structure for us to work from.
1061:- 6 articles per person sounds great, I can even offer to read more if that helps, however instead of each person reading random articles it may be a lot easier if we
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This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as stub, and the rating on other projects was brought up to Stub class.
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The best case is where an image has no copyright, or is under a copyright license that allows its unlimited reproduction for any purpose (such as Knowledge's own
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Do you guys know how to add a photo to our Knowledge page? I thought it would be nice to start with at least a photo of the book cover or the author... --
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Prose etc: there are various long compound sentences that could be split and instances of jargon. In keeping with writing for our target audience, the
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Also: Question - we dont need to hand in the annotated bibliography in class right? we just have to post it here by the end of tomorrow (monday 8)?
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Hey guys, I've been looking for some sources and found a few on JSTOR ... but I haven't had time to read them yet. I'm putting all the titles here.
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this page, so if you have any questions (anything at all!), you can leave them here or on my personal talk page, which is linked in my signature.
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I'll have 11 and 12 done for tomorrow. If anyone wants to pass any over let me know. (Maybe facebook because I check that more frequently.)
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Review of Lo real maravilloso en la narrativa latinoamericana actual. Cien años de soledad. El reino de este mundo. Pedro Paramo (3 pages)
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844:. At this stage it's not too important where it goes, what it is, or even what it looks like... as long as it's relevant and cited to a
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are articles on books written by UBC students that achieved featured status. They both therefore offer good models for you guys. --
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the project and contribute to the
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formulated or fully explored in regards to other, less directly biographical, works by Carpentier such as âEl reino de este mundoâ.
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856:) useful in getting a broad idea how to lay out the article, but much of that will come after we've bulked it up. All the best,
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to be associated with a shift in point of view from the omniscient narrator to a character who believes in such occurrencesâ.
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The Haitian Revolution in Interstices and Shadows: A Re-Reading of Alejo Carpentier's "The Kingdom of This World" (13 pages)
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really tell what the significance of this event is, and 'spectacle situation' and 'autocthonous' could be expanded upon.
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but because it's so easily done even with the best intentions I hope you understand it's something we have to mention.
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598:-related articles on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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Sounds good :) I'll keep checking back from time to time, but you know where my talk page is if you need anything.
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related articles on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
982:
Review of "Realismo Magico" y Lo real maravilloso" en "El reino de este mundo" y "El siglo de las luces" (3 pages)
1977:
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The Haitian Revolution in Interstices and Shadows: A Re-reading of Alejo Carpentierâs âThe Kingdom of This Worldâ
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The Haitian Revolution in Interstices and Shadows: A Re-Reading of Alejo Carpentier's "The Kingdom of This World"
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Review of "Realismo Magico" y Lo real maravilloso" en "El reino de este mundo" y "El siglo de las luces" (1 page)
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Alchemy of a Hero : a comparative study of the works of Alejo Carpentier and Mario Vargas Llosa - Bobs M. Tusa
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El cuerpo polĂtico: Carnaval, corporeidad y revoluciĂłn en El reino de este mundo de Alejo Carpentier (12 pages)
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Metamorphosis as Revolt: Cervantes' Persiles y Segismunda and Carpentier's El reino de este mundo (19 pages)
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Review of Images et mythes d'Haiti: El reino de este mundo, Alejo Carpentier (...and texts...) (3 pages)
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has covered this so hope you don't mind the repetition), the first thing you need do with the article is
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While this article is rather lengthy, there is not much information that was specifically related to
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El cuerpo polĂtico: Carnaval, corporeidad y revoluciĂłn en El reino de este mundo de Alejo Carpentier
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El cuerpo polĂtico: Carnaval, corporeidad y revoluciĂłn en El reino de este mundo de Alejo Carpentier
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Metamorphosis as Revolt: Cervantesâ Persiles y Sigismunda and Carpentierâs El reino de este mundo
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Metamorphosis as Revolt: Cervantes' Persiles y Segismunda and Carpentier's El reino de este mundo
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Images: these are appropriately licensed and captioned, though for images that are non-free (eg
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The Theater of the Haitian Revolution / The Haitian Revolution as Theater by Michael Dash, 2005
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article processes to navigating the shoals and rapids of our sometimes peculiar community. I've
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quote marks in the article section heading, but italicising it might be another alternative?)
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The Discourse of Contradiction: Metaphor, Metonymy and "El reino de este mundo" (14 pages)
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Two Paths to the Boom: Carpentier, Asturias, and the Performative Split (15 pages)
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you need to know where the image has come from and what it's copyright status is.
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Blancas Y Negras: Carpentier and the Temporalities of Mutual Exclusion (22 pages)
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Corrientes vanguardistas y surrealismo en la obra de Alejo Carpentier (17 pages)
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The Discourse of Contradiction: Metaphor, Metonymy and âEl reino de este mundoâ
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The Discourse of Contradiction: Metaphor, Metonymy and "El reino de este mundo"
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Alejo Carpentier: Dos Visiones del Negro, Dos Conceptos de la Novela (10 pages)
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Baroque Endings: Carpentier, Sarduy and Some Textual Contingencies (26 pages)
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I think the articles we have are going to be our list due today. Good work!
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Alejo Carpentier : estudios sobre su narrativa - Esther P. Mocega-Gonzålez
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Analisis objetivo (O material) del primer Carpentier (1933-1962) (21 pages)
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The Theater of the Haitian Revolution / The Haitian Revolution as Theater
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explores the role of music in Carpentier's works, with explicit focus on
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The Dialectics of Heresy and Authority in Borges and Carpentier (7 pages)
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The Performing Spectator in Alejo Carpentier's Fictional World (20 pages)
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Two Paths to the Boom: Carpentier, Asturias, and the Performative Split
1496:"Corrientes Vanguardistas y Surrealismo En la Obra de Alejo Carpentier"
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Blancas Y Negras: Carpentier and the Temporalities of Mutual Exclusion
961:
Los Productivos Anos Setenta de Alejo Carpentier (1904-1980) (21 pages)
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Hi all :) Svetlana's asked me to have a look at the article with the
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feel free! You might find the style guideline at WikiProject Novels (
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Alejo Carpentier: Dos visiones del negro, dos conceptos de la novela
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hey team, check this page for wiki references. hopefully it helps!
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final narrative thread concerns the role of voodoo in the colony.
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Patterns of Repetition in "The Kingdom of This World" (11 pages)
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To editors from the Magical Realism Reconsidered WikiProject ...
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send them some messages to see if they'll share with us. Also,
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The Performing Spectator in Alejo Carpentier's Fictional World
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The Dialects of Heresy and Authority in Borges and Carpentier
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The Dialects of Heresy and Authority in Borges and Carpentier
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in Carpentier at the moment. Anyway, see you all in class.
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Carpentier, El Reino de este mundo - Richard A. Young PhD
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Alejo Carpentier : a comprehensive study - Bobs M. Tusa
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So I suppose each person should take a few real articles
947:"The Human Comedy" in el Reino de Este Mundo (10 pages)
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Patterns of Repetition in âThe Kingdom of this Worldâ
1431:
Analisis objetivo (O material) del primer Carpentier
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Patterns of Repetition in "The Kingdom of This World"
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http://en.wikipedia.org/The_General_in_His_Labyrinth
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thanks so much for all the articles you've posted!!
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1166:Carpentier: Una revisiĂłn lineal - Dinko Cvitanovic
973:
A Return to Africa with a Carpentier Tale (9 pages)
1263:A New Novel By Alejo Carpentier, TJ Peavler, 1931
1292:Thoughts? Decided your final readings lists yet?
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1798:http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Citation_tools
1568:Los Productivos Anos Setenta de Alejo Carpentier
1174:CĂłmo leer a Alejo Carpentier - Patrick Collard
1656:âThe Human Comedyâ in âEl Reino de Este Mundoâ
59:If it no longer meets these criteria, you can
868:Thanks, EyeSerene. We appreciate your help!
1027:Unless one of you REALLY wants one of mine.
1017:"The Human Comedy" in el Reino de Este Mundo
980:Review of El reino de este mundo (2 pages)
959:Alejo Carpentier, Cuban Novelist (2 pages)
1968:Knowledge level-5 vital articles in Arts
1140:Knowledge:Public domain image resources
721:to talk over new ideas and suggestions.
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1772:perspectives is an important thought.
524:Antonio SĂĄnchez de Bustamante y Sirven
1943:Language and literature good articles
1063:split articles up according to themes
1055:Here are a few questions/suggestions
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1738:University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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1762:The Johns Hopkins University Press
1211:Let me know what you all think. --
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1903:Neutrality: this seems to be fine
836:To get you started (and I'm sure
821:to taking an article through the
52:. If you can improve it further,
1958:Knowledge vital articles in Arts
1953:Knowledge level-5 vital articles
1532:Alejo Carpentier, Cuban Novelist
787:. Further details are available
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1289:started on the bibliographies.
747:This article has been rated as
628:This article has been rated as
274:This article has been rated as
916:need to get this read quick.
785:University of British Columbia
40:has been listed as one of the
18:Talk:The Kingdom of this World
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2013:Low-importance novel articles
1998:Mid-importance Haiti articles
807:04:29, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
602:and see a list of open tasks.
248:and see a list of open tasks.
1983:Mid-importance Cuba articles
1785:09:17, 9 February 2010 (UTC)
1750:their literary significance.
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1248:19:04, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1228:The General in His Labyrinth
1221:18:48, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1194:17:17, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1152:11:49, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1105:05:43, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1086:05:30, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1040:02:41, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
1001:00:21, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
965:Framing Carpentier (5 pages)
937:01:12, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
893:08:31, 19 January 2010 (UTC)
882:18:56, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
863:20:39, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
727:Knowledge:WikiProject Novels
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2018:WikiProject Novels articles
730:Template:WikiProject Novels
608:Knowledge:WikiProject Haiti
504:CubaâSoviet Union relations
354:Cuba and the United Nations
291:WikiProject Cuba task list:
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2003:WikiProject Haiti articles
1924:09:42, 19 April 2010 (UTC)
1837:17:00, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
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1641:Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert
753:project's importance scale
718:general Project discussion
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611:Template:WikiProject Haiti
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121:Featured article candidate
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1948:GA-Class vital articles
1938:Knowledge good articles
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1462:El reino de este mundo.
1443:El reino de este mundo.
1419:El reino de este mundo.
484:War against the Bandits
1978:GA-Class Cuba articles
1842:Preliminary assessment
1826:submit the article at
1734:Pedro M. Barreda-TomĂĄs
1401:El reino de este mundo
1330:articles if need be.
1284:Annotated Bibliography
842:add referenced content
783:in Spring 2010 at the
781:educational assignment
464:Antonio Maceo Grajales
460:Abelardo Colomé Ibarra
1823:Good article criteria
1601:Frederick A. de Armas
1536:Frederick S. Stimson
1325:Articles for tomorrow
164:level-5 vital article
50:good article criteria
1906:Stability: also fine
1881:for a decent model.
1620:Florinda F. Goldberg
1379:Consolidated Sources
468:Bay of Pigs Invasion
441:Bay of Pigs Invasion
102:Good article nominee
1500:Klaus Muller-Bergh
1232:El Señor Presidente
1065:and maybe think of
449:Julio Antonio Mella
381:Dollar store (Cuba)
1754:Framing Carpentier
850:citation templates
789:on the course page
696:WikiProject Novels
418:Armando Valladares
173:content assessment
77:Article milestones
1702:Julio VĂ©lez-Sainz
1679:Naomi B. Sokoloff
1660:Giovanni Pontiero
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1511:comment added by
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1310:great. Cheers. --
1199:Article Structure
1070:what you think.
1006:Final Source List
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583:Haiti portal
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480:MĂĄximo GĂłmez
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179:WikiProjects
162:
137:Good article
136:
126:Not promoted
119:
114:May 16, 2010
100:
60:
58:
54:please do so
42:
41:
37:
1863:Knowledge!)
1717:Chris Weber
1572:Angel Rama
1561:TJ Peavler
1507:âPreceding
1354:âPreceding
1297:Chris Weber
1226:Yup. Both
1049:Hey Chris,
1032:Chris Weber
993:Chris Weber
919:âPreceding
831:watchlisted
366:Patana Cave
346:Calero Cave
229:Cuba portal
1932:Categories
1894:Coverage:
1885:accuracy."
1790:References
1473:Patrussell
1427:heritage.
1312:Patrussell
1253:Ok guys,
1213:Patrussell
1186:Patrussell
874:Mstmaurice
819:WikiMarkup
709:novelettes
407:Nochebuena
370:Pluma Cave
48:under the
1920:EyeSerene
1833:EyeSerene
1184:Cheers,--
1148:EyeSerene
889:EyeSerene
859:EyeSerene
362:Cura Cave
322:Task list
167:is rated
1804:Avneet86
1777:Avneet86
1521:contribs
1509:unsigned
1368:contribs
1360:Avneet86
1356:unsigned
1244:contribs
1236:jbmurray
1124:Fair Use
1116:CC-BY-SA
1067:sections
1045:Articles
933:contribs
921:unsigned
870:jbmurray
838:jbmurray
827:Featured
705:novellas
432:Copyedit
337:Requests
169:GA-class
62:reassess
1871:aren't.
1132:WP:NFCI
901:Sources
751:on the
632:on the
455:Cleanup
305:history
278:on the
85:Process
1828:WP:GAN
1091:Photos
724:Novels
701:novels
657:Novels
500:Expand
402:Update
387:Verify
175:scale.
107:Listed
88:Result
1158:Books
605:Haiti
596:Haiti
552:Haiti
490:Style
376:Stubs
315:purge
310:watch
156:This
1808:talk
1781:talk
1721:talk
1588:talk
1517:talk
1477:talk
1364:talk
1342:talk
1316:talk
1301:talk
1275:talk
1240:talk
1230:and
1217:talk
1190:talk
1120:GFDL
1118:and
1101:talk
1082:talk
1036:talk
997:talk
929:talk
878:talk
854:here
825:and
823:Good
711:and
413:NPOV
300:edit
251:Cuba
242:Cuba
198:Cuba
82:Date
1775:--
743:Low
624:Mid
270:Mid
1934::
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