Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Under the Jaguar Sun Three Themes, One Cohesive Whole - Literature Essay Samples
Italo Calvinoââ¬â¢s Under the Jaguar Sun is based almost entirely on a foundation of three essential themes, all of which relate in some way to the sensation of taste. While Calvino creates many antitheses, the dissonances actually turn into wonderful resolutions. This applies specifically to the narratorââ¬â¢s transformation from the beginning to the end and through the Mexican cuisine. He stresses the need of reciprocity in the tradition of human sacrifice and cannibalism (everyone was potentially sacrificer and victim) and that the reciprocity is the prime (if not the only) reason that the practice endured. Lastly, he establishes the principles of the ouroboros, arguing that life must feed on other life in order to live. Calvino weaves these three themes into a harmonic core for his overarching theme of taste and digestion, establishing the ritual cannibalism not as repulsive, but rather as uniting and intimate.Calvino uses numerous antitheses throughout Under the Jaguar Su n, and indeed they seem to make up the strongest basis for all his other themes. By the second sentence, the reader is already hit with an antithesis: the hotel (which is considered largely secular) was once the Convent of Santa Catalina (which is sacred). This transformation from religious to profane reappears in a scene near the very end of the narrative, in which the narrator and Olivia (who, although not with absolute certainty, appears to be his wife) take on the chacmool pose. Whereas the original chacmool would have held a tray to hold divine offerings of human hearts for the gods, the narrator and Olivia have on their laps a ââ¬Å"tray with the anonymous hotel breakfastâ⬠(Calvino 27), which is far from godlike. However, they still attempt to hide the ââ¬Å"subtle messages of asperity and sournessâ⬠(Calvino 27) with sweet pulps, which isnââ¬â¢t unlike what Salustiano Velazco speculated the Aztecs may have done with the human flesh. Perhaps, then, this scene a lso symbolizes the narrator and Oliviaââ¬â¢s understanding or growth in the Mexican culture. This growth extends from the beginning to the end of the piece and is shown distinctly in the narrator as he transforms, so to speak, from someone who tends to ââ¬Å"define experiences verbally and conceptuallyâ⬠(Calvino 11), placing a heavy emphasis on word use and diction, to someone who becomes a part of nature as a whole- an experience that words cannot adequately describe. His transformation is probably the most overarching of all of Calvinoââ¬â¢s antitheses. It takes place over the course of the entire passage, and most of the other antitheses branch off of the narratorââ¬â¢s transforming experiences.For instance, the narratorââ¬â¢s recurring experiences of Mexican cuisine highlights one of Calvinoââ¬â¢s most important antitheses that harmonize into one coherent blend- and that cuisine itself is the product of Mexicoââ¬â¢s own blending heritage. ââ¬Å"The cale ndars of the ancient Mexican civilizations, carved on the reliefs, represent a cyclic, tragic concept of timeâ⬠(Calvino 13), and indeed, ââ¬Å"time was not an empty, abstract measurement to the Aztecs, but rather something concrete, a force or substance or fluid perpetually being used upâ⬠(Paz 93). However, although Octavio Paz argues that ââ¬Å"one period of time ended and another came backâ⬠(Paz 94), ââ¬Å"perhaps the peoples that history defines as the successive occupants of these territories were merely a single peopleâ⬠(Calvino 13). Perhaps each cycle in the ancient Mexican civilizationsââ¬â¢ werenââ¬â¢t completely separate from one another, but instead all contributed to the beginning stages of an ââ¬Å"elaborate and bold cuisineâ⬠(Calvino 5), which occurred ââ¬Å"where the two civilizations [America and Spain] had merged, or perhaps where the conquered had triumphedâ⬠(Calvino 7). And just as the ââ¬Å"differing traditions and c ultural heritages mixed together and at last became oneâ⬠(Paz 91), various flavors in its cuisine also were brought together into a remarkable blend, which the narrator describes numerous times during his experiences of Mexico: his chiles en nogada are ââ¬Å"swimming in a walnut sauce whose harshness and bitter aftertaste were drowned in a creamy, sweetish surrenderâ⬠(Calvino 5), his ââ¬Å"crisp tortillas [â⬠¦] dip like spoons into [â⬠¦] the fat softness of the aguacateâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"cabrito [â⬠¦] provoked surprise, because the teeth would encounter first a crisp bit, then one that melted in the mouthâ⬠(Calvino 23)- to list a few. As he traveled ââ¬Å"from one locality to the next the gastronomic lexicon varied, always offering new items to be recorded and new sensations to be definedâ⬠(Calvino 8). Each new menu symbolizes- literally and figuratively- a new experience that brings him closer to the lived experience in the heart of Mexican c ulture.Before they are ingested by any menus, however, Olivia and the narratorââ¬â¢s original temperaments can be captured through the painting of the young nun and old priest, as it depicts a nearly opposite situation from the one that they are in at the time: while the nun and priest desperately love one another but cannot seem to reach one another, ââ¬Å"the physical bond between Olivia and [the narrator] was going through a phase of rarefactionâ⬠(Calvino 10), meaning that they had the capability to reach one another but did not have much of a desire to do so. As a couple, they contrast with the couple in the painting. Yet they also display differing thought processes amongst themselves regarding the painting: he is greatly concerned with slight nuances in the exact words in the paintingââ¬â¢s caption (such as his careful distinction between three different words for ââ¬Å"loveâ⬠), while she, although interested in the painting as well, seems almost impatient t o move on, ââ¬Å"to eat chiles en nogadaâ⬠(Calvino 4). Thus, Olivia is the first to have the desire to actually experience Mexico. It is fitting, then, that she immediately took a curiosity and interest in the ancient practice of Aztec human sacrifice and cannibalism, repetitively asking ââ¬Å"what [was done] with the victimsââ¬â¢ bodies afterwardâ⬠(Calvino 15). And, also to be expected, the narrator ââ¬Å"could not explain her insistence to [himself]â⬠(Calvino 15).Although at first glance it is mostly unapparent, Calvino also sneaks in a few synesthesias- that is, he produces other sensations (mostly taste) through his descriptions of sounds- throughout Under the Jaguar Sun. These synesthesias create an underlying tone so that the experiences of taste are ââ¬Å"exercised on the receptivity of all the sensesâ⬠(Calvino 5). The most obvious example of this is displayed through the cuisine that makes the ââ¬Å"flavorsââ¬â¢ highest notes vibrate, juxta posing them in modulations, in chords, and especially in dissonancesâ⬠(Calvino 5), but other intriguing examples can be uncovered upon closer examination of the piece, including one that can be comparative to the flavorsââ¬â¢ harmonizing: the orchestra that was playing for ââ¬Å"the varicolored, shirtsleeved touristsâ⬠(Calvino 21) both old and young- merging them all together as if they were the same, neither old nor young. So, just as flavors harmonize into chords, the different people harmonize into one culture. As a further example, the tea party was largely a ââ¬Å"spectacular acoustical event [â⬠¦] [made up of] the tinkling of cups and spoons and of knives cutting slices of cakeâ⬠(Calvino 17), which largely attribute to the sensation of taste even though the description itself is of sound. However, since the narrator himself is not experiencing the taste, the noises are represented as clashes rather than chords, as he isnââ¬â¢t tuned in to the flav ors.Interestingly, although the astonishing blend of flavors in Mexican dishes amazes the narrator, he doesnââ¬â¢t seem to begin becoming experience-oriented until nearly the middle of the narrative. The turning point, one could argue, is when he ââ¬Å"realized [his] gaze was resting not on [Oliviaââ¬â¢s] eyes but on her teeth, [â⬠¦] which [he] happened to be seeing for the first time not as the radiant glow of a smile but as the instruments most suited to their purpose: to be dug into flesh, to sever it, tear itâ⬠(Calvino 16). From that point forward, it seems, he finds it more and more difficult to hold onto his detail-oriented self; he must rely more heavily on experiences. For instance, when Salustiano is conversing with them on the patio outside the tea party, ââ¬Å"the archeological and ethnographical details [that the narrator] would have very much liked to hear sentence by sentence, [â⬠¦] were lost in the reverberations of the feastâ⬠(Calvino 18). How fitting, that the feast would make ââ¬Å"the flavorsââ¬â¢ highest notes vibrate, juxtaposing them in modulations, in chords, and especially in dissonances that would assert themselves as an incomparable experienceâ⬠(Calvino 5), that drowns out the narratorââ¬â¢s once-precious words and details! Furthermore, when ââ¬Å"[Salustiano] was talking about the human sacrificesâ⬠(Calvino 18)-which is more directly about cultural experience- ââ¬Å"his words now overcame more easily the barrier of sound that separated [them]â⬠(Calvino 19), despite their increased softness. Surely the narratorââ¬â¢s transformation is largely the cause of such a paradox.However, although it is apparent that the narrator is well on his way on his transformation, there is evidence suggesting that it is still incomplete. For one, the narrator imagines Olivia eating him, a ââ¬Å"relationship which in [his] imaginings [he] thought corresponded to Oliviaââ¬â¢s deepest desiresâ⠬ (Calvino 24), yet she apparently found him to be ââ¬Å"insipidâ⬠(Calvino 25), or without flavor. Thus, he reasons ââ¬Å"the Mexican cuisine, with all its boldness and imagination, was needed if Olivia was to feed on [him] with satisfactionâ⬠(Calvino 25)- a conclusion that obviously points out his need to taste more of Mexico, and actually to take on some of Mexicoââ¬â¢s harmonic flavor to cover up his own blandness. His old self would have been too preoccupied with details and words to realize this. Additionally, even after having been in Mexico for a lengthy period of time, the narrator still continues to place high importance on information that he can find in reading- such as when he read that the chacmool was a ââ¬Å"messenger of the gods [â⬠¦] in a guidebookâ⬠(Calvino 25). But he did continue further, asking intelligent questions that would have only occurred to him from experiencing and understanding the ancient culture- not simply regurgitating words from a guidebook. In conclusion, the narrator is gradually being absorbed into the Mexican culture.And as such, the height of the narratorââ¬â¢s experience can be depicted through his want to taste human flesh (this is his last ââ¬Å"menu itemâ⬠, regarding my former statement that each new menu brings a new experience), which obviously reflects ancient Aztec traditions. This need for the experience of cannibalism (in a metaphoric sense) brings in the next of Calvinoââ¬â¢s themes: the need for reciprocity. Although the narrator was imagining ââ¬Å"the sensation of [Oliviaââ¬â¢s] teeth in [his] fleshâ⬠(Calvino 23), at the same time he ââ¬Å"felt also that [he] was acting on her, transmitting sensations that spread from the taste buds through her whole bodyâ⬠(Calvino 23). Therefore, ââ¬Å"it was a reciprocal and complete relationship, which involved [them] and overwhelmed [them]â⬠(Calvino 23). In the same sense, ââ¬Å"all were potentially bot h sacrificer and victimâ⬠(Calvino 26) in the ancient tradition of human sacrifice, and, indeed, ââ¬Å"without this reciprocity, human sacrifice would be unthinkableâ⬠(Calvino 26). Largely due to the fact that Aztec human sacrifices were reciprocal (and that the tradition endured), the narrator concludes that ââ¬Å"the most appetizingly flavored human flesh belongs to the eater of human fleshâ⬠(Calvino 26). Through this conclusion, he comes to yet another transforming realization: ââ¬Å"it was only by feeding ravenously on Olivia that [he] would cease being tasteless to her palateâ⬠(Calvino 26). In other words, he couldnââ¬â¢t just imagine her eating him; in order for it to be a successful relationship, he would have to eat her as well. Their relationship must be reciprocal, just as the ancient human sacrifices were reciprocal.Thus, reciprocity marks a milestone late in the narratorââ¬â¢s transformation- whereas at the beginning of the narrative he is largely separate from his wife, eating side by side, now that he is being further infused into Mexican culture he is beginning to realize that instead they should interact with each other- which goes beyond eating ââ¬Å"normalâ⬠food, no matter how well blended that food may be. By eating each other, their ties to Mexican culture transcends time and brings them into the ââ¬Å"universal cannibalismâ⬠(Calvino 29) that everything in nature takes part in. And indeed, this universal cannibalism represents Calvinoââ¬â¢s third theme, the theme regarding the ouroboros, which brings the narrator fully into his new, transformed self. Even if we attempt to ignore it, we are all part of the this ââ¬Å"universal cannibalismâ⬠, although unlike the ancient Aztecs, for whom ââ¬Å"there was no mystificationâ⬠, (Calvino 22), Olivia realizes that we ââ¬Å"tear one another apart, pretending not to know it, pretending not to taste flavors anymoreâ⬠(Calvino 22). This s tatement echoes the one Howard Neverov makes in his poem ââ¬Å"Grace to Be Said in the Supermarketâ⬠, in which he refers to mankind as ââ¬Å"Great Geometersâ⬠to portray us as sort of gods, who put animal meat into ââ¬Å"cubes,â⬠ââ¬Å"cylinders,â⬠ââ¬Å"ellipsoids,â⬠and ââ¬Å"squares and oblongs with all the edges beveledâ⬠. Basically his main point is that we try to ignore the fact that we are eating life because we find it repulsive- and Calvino produces the same message through Olivia. Yet no matter how we present it, the fact remains the same: we are all basically ââ¬Å"a bunch of tubes with teeth on topâ⬠. We eat life to live, and through living produce more ââ¬Å"tubes with teeth on topâ⬠; the cycle continues on and on, just as the ouroboros symbol would suggest.It is when the narrator realizes this- when he suddenly realizes that he must become part of the life around him and not merely describe it- that he completes his trans formation. He jumps from being just halfway infused into his newfound self to suddenly ââ¬Å"living and dying in all the fibers of what is chewed and digested and in all the fibers that absorb the sun, consuming and digestingâ⬠(Calvino 29). There is nothing gradual about the final stage of his transformation. As the narrator is exploring the Palenque temples in a constant ââ¬Å"up-and-downâ⬠movement (through his climbing of staircases etc), he takes a final ââ¬Å"[plunge] down, [his] throat cut by the knife of the king-priest, down the high steps onto the forest of tourists with super-8s and usurped, broad-brimmed sombrerosâ⬠(Calvino 28). This plunge could easily represent ââ¬Å"the descent of [his] body to the subterranean gods and its rebirth as vegetationâ⬠(Calvino 28). If so, then one could argue that he became part of his surroundings, part of the vegetation, and ââ¬Å"the solar energy coursed along dense networks of blood and chlorophyllâ⬠(Ca lvino 28). All in all, his transformation was complete.Furthermore, the narrator describes personal ââ¬Å"ups and downs to which, over a long period, the life of every couple is subjectâ⬠(Calvino 10)- and his rebirth (or his coming ââ¬Å"upâ⬠from his downward plunge) blatantly illustrates this prospect. He has been in a ââ¬Å"phase of rarefactionâ⬠(Calvino 10), but now that he has been brought back ââ¬Å"upâ⬠, so to speak, ââ¬Å"[his and Oliviaââ¬â¢s] teeth began to move slowly, with equal rhythm, and [their] eyes stared into each otherââ¬â¢s with the intensity of serpentsâ⬠(Calvino 29). Whereas flavors were made ââ¬Å"especially in dissonancesâ⬠(Calvino 5) in the beginning of the story, the harmonious and reciprocal intimacy of cannibalism between Olivia and the narrator is in ââ¬Å"equal rhythmâ⬠(Calvino 29) by the end. In short, Calvino has resolved the dissonances of his earlier antitheses into harmony through the transformat ion of the narrator.Actually, that is but one of Calvinoââ¬â¢s themes that completes in this final scene. In fact, it is in this scene during which the narrator and Olivia join together with renewed fervor that all three of Calvinoââ¬â¢s themes merge: While Calvinoââ¬â¢s early synesthesias are displayed ââ¬Å"especially in dissonancesâ⬠(Calvino 5), by the end of the piece they are displayed in ââ¬Å"equal rhythmâ⬠(Calvino 29); Olivia and the narrator are ââ¬Å"swallowing each other in turnâ⬠(Calvino 29), just as was essential for the practice of ancient human cannibalism; and they become part of ââ¬Å"the universal cannibalismâ⬠(Calvino 29)- that is, they are part of the ouroboros, symbolized by ââ¬Å"being swallowed [â⬠¦] by the serpent that digests us all, assimilated ceaselessly in the process of ingestion and digestionâ⬠(Calvino 29). The narrator has transformed, he and Olivia are reciprocally intimate, and through eating each othe r they replace the serpent eating its own tail as the symbolic ouroboros. In short, Calvino has beautifully tied his three themes together into one final harmonic, cohesive conclusion.
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