Saturday, February 19, 2011

Loss Normal Cervical Lordosis

Aunt Tula


One begins to read the introduction to editing The Country of Aunt Tula (1921) de Unamuno with confidence we report on some general about the author and his work and suddenly, wham, in the first paragraph tell the whole story. We started well ...

As told in the introduction, the story is very simple: Rosa's sister, Aunt Tula, married Ramiro. They have three children and finally Rosa dies. Aunt Tula promises before he died that his children will not lack mother. Is sacrificed to the limit and take care of them perfectly, as the great mother who is in spite of not wanting to marry a man.

Good. We know that Tula is very loving, very maternal, very holy and such, but the story is in my opinion a bit simple or at least it has almost nothing that interested me, his argument seems to me typical of a soap opera desktop, or even that: it focuses almost exclusively on marriage and child rearing. Tula is the conception of marriage is Catholic and traditional, to use neutral adjectives: "Marriage was instituted to marry, give grace to those who are married and bear children for heaven," he says. For better or for worse, these are the ideological coordinates in which the characters move, which the modern reader may be more or less obsolete. Moreover, it is a book that reads fast, short, short chapters and lively style (no convoluted story and a lot of dialogue).

Being a bit simplistic, the characters in the book are divided between those who die, those who marry and birth. Little more knowledge of them, I think not even told what works Ramiro. The truth is that not very interested in the lives of the characters in this book. For those interested, there is also a 1964 film with the same title and from what I've seen good reviews.
Miguel de Unamuno wrote
Fog and only for that novel (or nivola ), I deserve great respect. But the truth is I'm not so staunch him to not recognize that Aunt Tula I do not think a great book.

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