Macondo

{{Short description|Fictional town created by Gabriel García Márquez}}

{{other uses}}

{{Refimprove|date=January 2022}}

Macondo ({{IPA|es|maˈkondo|ES-pe|}}) is a fictional town described in Gabriel García Márquez's novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. It is the hometown of the Buendía family.

Aracataca

Macondo is often supposed to draw from García Márquez's childhood town, Aracataca, near the north (Caribbean) coast of Colombia, 80 km south of Santa Marta.

In June 2006, there was a referendum to change the name of the town from Aracataca to Macondo, which ultimately failed due to low turnout.{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/5116004.stm|title=Marquez town rebuffs Macondo name|date=2006-06-26|newspaper=BBC|access-date=2016-08-16}}

Etymology

In the first chapter of his autobiography, Living to Tell the Tale, García Márquez states that he took the name Macondo from a sign at a banana plantation near Aracataca. He also mentions the fact that Macondo is the local name of the tree Cavanillesia platanifolia, which grows in that area.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-VQzU5X7Ta0C&pg=PT346|title=Enciclopédia Agrícola Brasileira: I-M Vol. 4|publisher=EdUSP|year=1995|isbn=978-85-314-0719-2|pages=346–|author1=Peixoto, Aristeu Mendes|author2=de Toledo, Francisco Ferraz|accessdate=23 March 2013}}

Fictional history

The town first appears in García Márquez's short story "Leaf Storm". It is the central location for the subsequent novel One Hundred Years of Solitude. He later used Macondo as a setting for several other stories.

In In Evil Hour, published the year before One Hundred Years of Solitude, García Márquez mentions Macondo as the town where Father Ángel was succeeded by the one-hundred-year-old Antonio Isabel del Santísimo Sacramento del Altar Castañeda y Montero, a clear reference to the novel to come.

In the narrative of One Hundred Years of Solitude, the town grows from a tiny settlement with almost no contact with the outside world, to eventually become a large and thriving place, before a banana plantation is set up. The establishment of the banana plantation leads to Macondo's downfall, followed by a gigantic windstorm that wipes it from the map. As the town grows and falls, different generations of the Buendía family play important roles, contributing to its development.

The fall of Macondo comes first as a result of a four-year rainfall, which destroyed most of the town's supplies and image. During the years following the rainfall, the town begins to empty, as does the Buendía home.

References