Antonio Skarmeta and the Post Boom.
Nash, Susan Smith
In doing ground-breaking research on the influential and subtly
changing South American literary climate, Donald Shaw has provided an
invaluable resource for English-speaking readers by assembling a book of
literary criticism which is, at the same time, a close analysis of the
work of an influential contemporary literary figure and a more general
overview of a movement. Antonio Skarmeta and the Post Boom is one of the
most lucid critical works to appear in years, and although the focus is
on Antonio Skarmeta, a Chilean fiction writer, the primary concern of
the book is to provide a thorough understanding of why twentieth-century
South American fiction appears to have gone full circle, from realism to
surrealism for "magical realism") and back again to realism,
or what Skarmeta refers to as "hyperrealism."
Skarmeta, born in Antofagasta, Chile, in 1940, is a pivotal figure
in many ways. First, his fiction reflects the influence of South and
Central American "Boom" writers who rejected traditional
realism in favor of a more surreal, "magical" or modernist
approach. The Boom writers include but are not limited to Juan Carlos
Onetti, Julio Cortazar, Juan Rulfo, Alejo Carpentier, Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, Carlos Fuentes, Mario Vargas Llosa, Jose Donoso, and Ernesto
Sabato. As Shaw points out, their primary defining characteristic has to
do with their attitude toward reality. They depart from realism in
fiction by moving away from representation based on verisimilitude and
toward a more mythic or created imaginary or even fantastic reality. The
supreme Boom novel, according to Shaw, is Garcia Marquez's Cien
anos de soledad (1967).
While Skarmeta could not help but incorporate the Boom stance
toward representation in his writing, he, like many other post-Boom
writers, called into question its major tenets. He accused Boom writers
of elitism and obsession with technique at the expense of true human
concerns. While surrealism or magical realism may have been an
appropriate reaction to the perceived North American cultural
imperialism which was of great concern to many South American writers,
Skarmeta argued that such a view of reality was no longer appropriate.
According to Skarmeta, who was deeply affected by the Allende regime in
Chile, it was now necessary to develop a more "readerly"
(rather than "writerly") fiction, which should include new
points of reference -- the cotidiano -- incorporating sports, pop
culture, feminist thought, and current events.
In addition to providing an excellent overview of the
philosophical and intellectual groundings of the post-Boom movement, the
book contains Shaw's excellent close analysis of Skarmeta's
important works. The most compelling chapter is the one covering
Ardiente paciencia (1985), a novel which placed Skarmeta squarely in the
midst of Chilean political controversy. Shaw's insight into how
Skarmeta creates a new genre of ideological fiction by means of
hyperrealism is often brilliant. What Shaw does not do, however, is
discuss why or when this type of fiction may be relevant to the average
North American reader. Nevertheless, Antonio Skarmeta and the Post Boom
is an invaluable reference and critical work which is, in its thorough
research and careful analysis, indispensable to scholars and general
readers who are interested in contemporary South American literature.