When I hear “magical realism” I think of the works of Franz Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges,  Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, Angel Carter, Isabel Allende,  Salman Rushdie, Ben Okri, Jeannette Winterson. On the surface it is a  genre that is barely speculative fiction, that is perhaps a slipstream  attempt to write fantasy while remaining in the respectable realm of  literary fiction. And on the other hand, most of the magical realist  stories we have published over the years (‘Letting Go’, ‘Pianissimo’)  have been social rather than political, moving rather than rousing. As  the “magic” is typically underplayed in this type of fiction, what we  are left with is human action and interaction, the heart of all good  writing.
But  there is more to magical realism than fantasy-lite. All of the authors  listed above write unrelentingly political work, with settings where  mythology and folklore, or the bizarre and the surreal, bleed into the  all-too-real world; rather than providing escapism and excitement, the  presence of magic serves to put the ugliness and violence of political  abuse into starker contrast. This is the realism of our world, not  safely distanced by a fantastic setting. This is the core to  understanding our attraction to magical realism: the “realism” part of  its name suggests that there is a tough core to the genre, a grittiness  that puts it at (or slightly beyond) the darkest edge of the respectable  literary spectrum.
In a magical realist story (like ‘Apala’, ‘In the Shadow of Kakadu’ or ‘Nasmina’s Black Box’)  mysterious powers may seep into the “real” word without anyone batting  an eyelid, and it may be handled realistically and with attention to  human reactions and behaviour, but it doesn’t change the world. Corrupt  politicians can still cover up their crimes; brutal military regimes can  still repress all opposition; an ugly, bigoted mob can still brutalize a  woman who dares to stand up; a native child can still be taken from his  home by well-meaning colonials. Because a magical realist plot, like  those of the best socio-political speculative fiction works, recognizes  that it is human behaviour, cultural reactions, social interactions and  political power that drive the world, not possession of a laser gun,  ninja abilities, a divine parent or the power to speak to animals.
1 comment:
Sherman Alexie is a must-read for magical realism.
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