ISSN:
1590-3478
Keywords:
Key words Fatal familial insomnia
;
Prion disease
;
Pica
;
Gabriel Gracía Márquez
;
Insomnia plague
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract “All the great writers have good eyes” is a sentence by V. Nabokov that is very suitable for G.G. Márquez and his One Hundred Years of Solitude. The novel, published in 1967, introduces among many others, the character of little Rebeca, whose frailness and greenish skin revealed hunger “that was older than she was”. The girl, because of a pica syndrome, only liked to eat earth and the cake of white-wash. But her fate appears to be determined by the lethal insomnia plague, whose most fearsome part was not the impossibility of sleeping but its inexorable evolution toward a loss of memory in which the sick person “sinks into a kind of idiocy that had no past”. Rebeca's lethal insomnia looks quite similar to the “peculiar, fatal disorder of sleep” originally described by Lugaresi et al. in 1986. One Hundred Years of Solitude shows that G.G. Márquez was gifted not only with good eyes, but has the seductive power of changing reality into fantasy, while transforming his visions into reality.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s100720070085
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