Ficciones

Ficciones
First edition
AuthorJorge Luis Borges
Original titleFicciones
Translatorvarious
CountryArgentina
LanguageSpanish
PublisherEditorial Sur (1944)
Emecé (1956)
Publication date
1941–2, 1944, 1956
Published in English
1962 by Grove Press
Media typePrint
Pages203pp (1944)
197pp (1956)

Ficciones (in English: "Fictions") is a collection of short stories by Argentine writer and poet Jorge Luis Borges, originally written and published in Spanish between 1941 and 1956. Thirteen stories from Ficciones were first published by New Directions in the English-language anthology Labyrinths (1962). In the same year, Grove Press published the entirety of the book in English using the same title as in the original language. "The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim" originally appeared published in A History of Eternity (Historia de la eternidad) (1936). Ficciones became Borges's most famous book and made him known worldwide.

The book is dedicated to writer Esther Zemborain de Torres Duggan, a friend and collaborator of Borges's.

Background

Publication

In 1941, Borges's second collection of fiction, El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan (English:The Garden of Forking Paths) was published. It contained eight stories. In 1944, a new section labeled Artificios ("Artifices"), containing six stories, was added to the eight of The Garden of Forking Paths. These were given the collective title Ficciones. Borges added three more stories to the Artifices section in the 1956 edition.[1]

Translation

In 1948, the story "The Garden of Forking Paths" was translated into English by Anthony Boucher and published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.

In 1962, an English translation of Ficciones was published by Grove Press. Edited and introduced by Anthony Kerrigan, the other translators were Anthony Bonner, Alastair Reid, Helen Temple, and Ruthven Todd.

Contents

Style

Ficciones emphasizes and calls attention to its fictional nature. The choice and use of literary devices are conspicuous in the stories. Naomi Lindstrom explains that Borges saw an effort to make a story appear natural "as an impoverishment of fiction's possibilities and falsification of its artistic character."[2]

Themes

The labyrinth is a recurring motif throughout the stories. It is used as a metaphor to represent a variety of things: the overwhelmingly complex nature of worlds and the systems that exist on them, human enterprises, the physical and mental aspects of humans, and abstract concepts such as time. The stories of Borges can be seen as a type of labyrinth themselves.[2]

Borges often gives his first-person narrators the name "Borges." While he imparts many of his own characteristics in them, he does not idealize them, and gives them human failings as well.[2]

Borges often puts his protagonists in red enclosures. This has led to analysis of his stories from a Freudian viewpoint,[2] although Borges himself strongly disliked his work being interpreted in such a way.[3] In fact, he called psychoanalysis (Obra poética, Prólogo) "la triste mitología de nuestro tiempo", or "the sad mythology of our time".

Borges loved books and gives detailed descriptions of the characteristics of the fictional texts in his stories.[2] In "The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim", he indirectly suggests that a librarian is even holier than a saint.

Other themes throughout his stories include: philosophical issues; deterioration and ruination; games of strategy and chance; conspiracies and secret societies; and ethnic groups, especially those in his own ancestry.[2]

Reception

Ficciones is one of Le Monde's 100 Books of the Century.

According to the Norwegian writer Karl Ove Knausgaard, the first story in Ficciones, "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius", is "the best short story ever written."[4]

References

  1. ^ Bell-Villada, Gene H. (1981). Borges and His Fiction: A Guide to His Mind and Art. The University of North Carolina. pp. 69–101. ISBN 0-8078-1458-X.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lindstrom, Naomi (1990). Jorge Luis Borges: A Study of the Short Fiction. G.K. Hall & Co. pp. 23–25. ISBN 0-8057-8327-X.
  3. ^ Lindstrom, Naomi (1990). Jorge Luis Borges: A Study of the Short Fiction. G.K. Hall & Co. p. 32. ISBN 0-8057-8327-X.
  4. ^ "Karl Ove Knausgård on Literary Freedom (Ep. 66)". 2 July 2020.

External links

  • Bibliography maintained at University of Pittsburgh
  • Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges, reviewed by Ted Gioia (Postmodern Mystery)
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