Blowup- Julio Cortázar
Point of View-
The story is narrated in
the first, second and third person point of view. Cortazar debates in the very
begining of the story the way he wants to tell it, whether first second or
third. He eventually concludes with "What he Hell" and procedes to
use all three.
Plot-
The narration of the story
actually starts halfway through it, as again mentioned in the beginning of
it. Where Michael, the main character, starts to describe the scene he just
witnessed and introduces himself as a photographer and pretty good at seeing.
Once he finds a woman seducing a boy at the park and is weirdly intrigued by it
and eventually takes a photograph of it at the climax of the seduction. He then
reveals the photo and it turns out to be a homosexual seduction, this fact
drives Michael crazy and traumatized by the photo.
Setting-
Early to mid-20th
Century Paris, whether it is Michael’s apartment or the park where he
photographs the boy’s seduction.
Symbols-
The
increase of size of the photography, as it reveals otherwise of what Michael thought
he saw.
The
clouds and pigeons, they detonate Michael’s supposed ability to observe and
detail, but all end up being hallucinations and a part of his vision of his
photography.
Conflict-
Man vs.
Self. Michael’s recalling of the event and the revelation of the blow-up are
contrasting, he told the story wrongly and he isn´t really seeing what was
there. The fact that the protagonist´s reality is shifted so radically that he
doesn´t even know in which one he is at the beginning of the narration, as the
clouds and pigeons symbolize, the mixture of realities. When he screams: “I
don´t want to see anymore”, even though he praises himself over that same thing
is Michael turning himself to his own flaw and it appears to be too much for
him.
In the level
of detail throughout the story, Cortazar sets up what would become the trauma
and climax that his character will go through. The fact that the narrator
fixates so much on every detail he can remember of the seduction, and makes the
same in the actual reveal of the blowup, that Michael has no reason nor
reference what is real or not to him. Him not wanting to see anymore is also
representing him wanting to escape any sense of reality he can come up with, as
he is unsure of his mental and physical state.
Great job
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