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The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

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The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World. By: Jack Biemer , Nicole Zabinski , Lindsey Beale, Maria Rendo , Sarah Moore. Summary-. Characters: Esteban - (protagonist) Grown man who was found dead in the ocean by village children. Handsome, strongly built stranger. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Handsomest Drowned The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World Man in the World By: Jack Biemer, Nicole By: Jack Biemer, Nicole Zabinski, Lindsey Beale, Zabinski, Lindsey Beale, Maria Rendo, Sarah Moore Maria Rendo, Sarah Moore
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Page 1: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

The Handsomest Drowned The Handsomest Drowned Man in the WorldMan in the World

By: Jack Biemer, Nicole Zabinski, By: Jack Biemer, Nicole Zabinski, Lindsey Beale, Maria Rendo, Lindsey Beale, Maria Rendo,

Sarah Moore Sarah Moore

Page 2: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Summary-Summary-

• Characters: • Esteban- (protagonist) • Grown man who was found dead in the ocean by village

children. • Handsome, strongly built stranger. • Women put a personality to him that matches his physical

features (kind, innocent, good-natured)• Inspires the villagers to examine their lives and to beautify

their village• “Esteban really exists not in the corpse, but mainly in the

minds and the bodies of the villagers” (701, Short Stories for Students).

Page 3: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Summary-Summary-

• Characters:• Villagers- (antagonist) • None of the names are revealed- enhances the

idea that they work and live as a group• They knew Esteban was a stranger because “they

simply had to look at one another to see that they were all there” (701).

• Not many people in their village• Acts more like a large family rather than a clan

Page 4: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Summary-Summary-

• Setting-• Unnamed island• Has the feel of a faraway land because there is no exact

location and the villager’s isolation.• Very Primitive (used a wheel-less sled to take Esteban to

his funeral), so it could take place in a prehistoric era or just be so isolated that it doesn’t develop quickly

• Garcia’s Marquez’s inspirations-• Very similar to his childhood home

• Ocean liners show that it is a real place that can be visited.

• Represents something that is magical or mystical, but also real. (Relates back to the concept of Magical Realism)

Page 5: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Summary-Summary-

• Plot Structure-• Exposition: Introduced to the village. Very small,

isolated, primitive, and not motivated. They are not working towards achieving anything-other than existence.

• Rising Action- The drowned man is found and carried to land. The women are amazed by his large size and beauty, and eventually the men are too. They assign a personality to Esteban that they think matches him.

Page 6: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Summary-Summary-

• Climax: Esteban’s funeral. His body is returned to the sea, and the villagers realize they will never be the same. In that moment they “realize the narrowness of their dreams”(701) and strive to improve their village.

• Falling Action and Conclusion: The village now has a new vision for the future. They will clean up and beautify their village.

Page 7: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Analysis Questions-Analysis Questions-

• (Write this under ‘Questions for analysis of Magical Realist Fiction’, back of first page)

Page 8: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Realistic ElementsRealistic Elements

• Normal people

• Village life

• Characters wondering where a body came from

• Women being interested in a handsome man

Page 9: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Magical ElementsMagical Elements

• The villagers’ reactions to Esteban’s arrival

• The way the villagers give the drowned man a personality

• The fact that Esteban becomes more real/alive than the living villagers

• Only Esteban has any personality and individuality

Page 10: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Function of Magical ElementsFunction of Magical Elements

• According to literary critic George R. McMurray, “Esteban [is] the messenger of hope, beauty, and human solidarity.”

• Motivates the people of the village to strive for ideals above and beyond what they had previously attempted

Page 11: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Function of Magical ElementsFunction of Magical Elements

• The men and women of the village “become aware for the first time of the desolation of their streets, the dryness of their courtyards, the narrowness of their dreams” (706).

• Esteban’s mystery allows the villagers to fantasize about his past

Page 12: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Treatment of Magical ElementsTreatment of Magical Elements

• The magical elements are mirrored in the actions of the villagers

Page 13: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Characters’ Reactions to the Characters’ Reactions to the Magical ElementsMagical Elements

• The women and men of the village change and make changes to the village for the benefit of Esteban

• Esteban evoked a reason for change and acceptance among the villagers

Page 14: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Relationship Between Real/Unreal Relationship Between Real/Unreal Elements Elements

• Finding a drowned man is a natural occurrence

• The body becomes important to the women of the village, who become obsessed with it

Page 15: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Dreamlike Dreamlike QQualities ualities

• Although the women of the village know nothing about the body’s past, they imagine him as the most perfect man on Earth

• Even after being drowned, Esteban is still the most handsome man the villagers have ever seen

Page 16: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Treatment of Time Treatment of Time

• The story occupies a timeless era: it doesn’t say when the story takes place

• Time is treated normally; time is chronological

Page 17: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Political/Cultural Message Political/Cultural Message

• Society’s infatuation with celebrities and inability to see their flaws and overlook their facades of perfection

• The importance of heroes in society

• Occasionally people of power are voted because of their charisma, and not by what they stand for

Page 18: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

FIGURATIVE LANGUAGEFIGURATIVE LANGUAGE

(Write this under ‘other’ in your packets, back of second page)

Page 19: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Figurative Language: Imagery Figurative Language: Imagery

• “The first children who saw the dark and slinky bulge approaching through the sea let themselves think it was an enemy ship”(702)

• “But when it washed up on the beach, they removed the clumps of seaweed, the jellyfish tentacles, and the remains of fish and flotsam, and only then did they see that it was a drowned man” (702)

• “The village was made up of twenty-odd-wooden houses that had stone courtyards with no flowers and which were spread about on the end of a desert like cape” (702)

Page 20: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

FigurativeFigurative Language: Imagery Language: Imagery• “But when it washed up on the beach, they removed the

clumps of seaweed, the jellyfish tentacles, and the remains of fish and flotsam, and only then did they see it was a drowned man” (702)

• “They could see him in life, condemned to going through doors sideways, cracking his head on crossbeams, remaining on his feet during visits, not knowing what to do with his soft, pink, sea lions hands…”(703)

• “…, even they might have been impressed with his gringo accent, the macaw on his shoulder, his cannibal-killing blunderbuss, but there could be only one Estaban in the world, and there he was stretched out like a sperm whale, shoeless, wearing the pants of an undersized child, and with those stony nails that had to be cut with a knife” (705)– Gringo- in Latin America, that of a foreigner, especially a

person from the United States or England

Page 21: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Figurative Language: PersonificationFigurative Language: Personification

• “… mother’s always went about with the fear that the wind would carry off their children,…” (702)

• “…, they noticed his the vegetation on him came from faraway oceans and deep water and that his clothes were in tatters, as If he had sailed through labyrinths” (702)

• “After midnight the whistling of the wind died down, and the sea fell into its Wednesday drowsiness” (703)– Wednesday drowsiness- an idiom peculiar to this type

of fishing community. Wednesday can be considered to mean roughly “Tiresome”

Page 22: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Figurative Language: PersonificationFigurative Language: Personification

• “… mother’s always went about with the fear that the wind would carry off their children,…” (702)

• “…, they noticed his the vegetation on him came from faraway oceans and deep water and that his clothes were in tatters, as if he had sailed through labyrinths” (702)

• “After midnight the whistling of the wind died down, and the sea fell into its Wednesday drowsiness” (703)– Wednesday drowsiness- an idiom peculiar to this type

of fishing community. Wednesday can be considered to mean roughly “Tiresome”

Page 23: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Themes-Themes-

• (Write this under ‘Themes’ in your packet, second page)

Page 24: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Myth and the human conditionMyth and the human condition

Myth and the human condition explains the tendency for people to create exotic stories to help explain their world.

• “They thought that he would have so much authority that could have drawn fish out of the sea simply by calling their names and that he would have put so much work into his land that springs would have burst forth and he would be able to plant flowers among the rocks”(703).

Page 25: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Versions of realityVersions of reality

• Which of the drowned man’s qualities were real, and which qualities were given to him.

• Is the drowned man really Esteban, or does Esteban symbolize something completely different?

Page 26: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Death and how we deal with itDeath and how we deal with it

• The people of the village initially treat the dead as simply dead, but after Esteban, they seem to have a new found respect for the dead.

• The village started by treating him as a random children's toy, but at the end, they treat him like a king. They treat him as if he was alive, and this change in attitude changes their lives for the better.

Page 27: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Transformation

• The villagers change their lives after Esteban’s visit. Also, the image of Esteban changes throughout the story.

• “…because they were going to paint their house fronts gay colors to make Esteban’s memory eternal, and they were going to break their backs digging for springs among the cliffs and planting flowers”(706).

Page 28: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

The power of oneThe power of one

• The power of one shows how one person or thing can have a drastic improvement on peoples lives.

• “But they also knew that everything would be different from then on, that their ceilings would be higher and their floors stronger so that Esteban’s memory could go everywhere”(706).

Page 29: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Beauty and aesthetics Beauty and aesthetics

• The villagers’ perception of this dead man is in direct proportion with his beauty.

• As the villagers see Esteban in different stages, like him covered with seaweed or him all dressed up, they see

him in different myths and fantasies.

Page 30: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Biographical Information of Biographical Information of Garcia Garcia Marquez-Marquez-

• (Write this under ‘Biographical Information’ in your packets, last page)

Page 31: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

His Life-His Life-

• Born on March 6, 1928 in Aracataca, Colombia• Raised by grandparents:

Grandfather “was my umbilical cord with history and reality” (García Márquez).

Grandmother “source of magical, superstitious and supernatural view of reality” (García Márquez).

• Lived in Venezuela, Cuba, Mexico, Italy, France, the US, and Spain.

• Studied Law

Page 32: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Highlights-Highlights-

• Gabriel García Márquez: a man of the coast (verbally outgoing and superstitious)

• Wrote for El Universal, El Heraldo, and El Espectador.• 1st regular movie critic in Colombia. • Awarded with an honorary doctorate from Columbia

University.

• One Hundred Years of Solitude: – Italian Chianchiano Prize– Best Foreign Book in France

• Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982

Page 33: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Analysis-Analysis-

• “Utilizes a heroic figure to revolutionize mundane reality” (Mary E. Davis).

• “But they also knew everything would be different from then on, that their houses would have wider doors, higher ceilings […]” (706).

• “A constant feature of García Márquez´ style has been his fusion of Greek, Spanish, and American literary models and mythology” (Mary E. Davis).

• “The fantastic details of the stories of García Márquez raise questions about reality” (O´Neil, Ed.).

Page 34: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

Analysis-Analysis-

• “A preference for open form, a refusal of closure, a deliberate provocation of the reader to create for himself the meaning of the narrative elements” (Mary E. Davis).

• “In addition, each work is touched with deep melancholy” (O´Neil, Ed.). – “Look there, where the wind is so peaceful now that it

´s gone to sleep beneath the beds, over there, where the sun´s so bright that the sunflowers don´t know which way to turn, yes, over there, that´s Esteban´s village” (706).

Page 35: The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World

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