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\El Norte,\ Deracination and Circularity: An Epic Gone Awry
by
Brakel, Arthur
in
American Indians
/ Economic Opportunities
/ Foreign Countries
/ Guatemala
/ Maya (People)
/ Mexican Americans
/ Mexico
2007
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\El Norte,\ Deracination and Circularity: An Epic Gone Awry
by
Brakel, Arthur
in
American Indians
/ Economic Opportunities
/ Foreign Countries
/ Guatemala
/ Maya (People)
/ Mexican Americans
/ Mexico
2007
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\El Norte,\ Deracination and Circularity: An Epic Gone Awry
Journal Article
\El Norte,\ Deracination and Circularity: An Epic Gone Awry
2007
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Overview
Early journalistic reviews (e.g., Gold, Ebert, and Kael) of \"El Norte\" (1983), Gregory Nava's first major film, identify it as an epic. In \"El Norte\" the siblings Enrique and Rosa, two Guatemalan Amerindians, leave their native village on a quest to what for them is the mythical land in the North. Although \"El Norte\" corresponds to the general scheme of the migratory epic, in which characters leave their native land, endure perils, and finally reach their goal, the author argues that this film's structure and, more importantly, its theme and message derive more specifically and extensively, albeit inversely, from an epic in which the protagonist's voyage is spiritual rather than geographical and which plumbs, if not all mankind's fate, at least that of Christendom--Dante Alighieri's \"Divine Comedy.\" That is, he maintains that \"El Norte\" is an epic of modernity in which economic opportunity and political freedom take the place of the union with God that Dante achieved. It is also different from the \"Divine Comedy\" insofar as it distorts Dante's ascendance from the depths of hell into paradise. In \"El Norte\" the protagonists leave a would-be paradise turned infernal only to find themselves in a similarly hellish situation at the end of their quest. This film is an epic gone tragically awry: in the course of the plot, rather than achieve their desired prosperity and new identities, the sibling protagonists Rosa and Enrique lose their authenticity, i.e., their identities as Central American Indians, descendants of the Mayans. (Contains 12 notes.)
Publisher
Bilingual Review Press
Subject
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