其他摘要:This article analyzes a female character (Fermina Daza) in the García Márquez novel Love in theTimes of Cholera. She appears tied to certain socio-cultural values imposed by the patriarchal heritage. Nevertheless, she is able to throw off the shackles of oppressive power in an ineluctable need for women to transcend their condition, as she seeks to consolidate her identity, her ideology and her dominant otherness. The central idea revolves around the social construction of femininity linked to a patriarchy that opposes any female intellectual powers, at the beginning of the twentieth century when marriage was the only alternative for women. The article also proposes to show the presence of an incipient feminism in the novel opposed to patriarchal domination at the time, when woman was considered a decorative object, a kitchen drudge and someone to raise the children; any other domain of open space outside the home was tacitly forbidden. The issue of motherhood as source of identity, idiosyncratically assumed by Fermina, is analyzed, as well as the slight importance given to it by the narrator, who merely uses it to show the conventions of those times.
关键词:patriarcado;Patriarcado;literatura;El amor en los tiempos del cólera.;feminismo;García Márquez;El amor en los tiempos del cólera