Revolución and Narcos: national myths, parody and satire in Jorge Ibargüengoitias Los relámpagos de agosto and Juan Pablo Villalobos' Fiesta en la madriguera

Hamburg University

Language:

Lale Suzan Özren

Lale Özren completed her master's degree in Spanish, Ancient American Studies and Turkology at the University of Hamburg in 1993. After various life and career stages as an entrepreneur in Spain, a specialist in digitalization in education, and a translator of series and films, she decided in 2017 to catch up on her doctoral studies, which continued the research from her master's thesis on parody and satire and extended it to contemporary Mexican "narco" literature. The PhD was successfully completed at the end of 2022. Currently, Lale Özren is intensively pursuing her translation and localization projects from Spanish and English into German.

Let's have a?

Expertise

  • Parody and satire
  • (National) Narratives
  • Narco literature

Of interest to

  • Literary scholars
  • Romance Studies scholars
  • People interested in Mexico
Photo / Lale Suzan Özren
Lale Suzan Özren

Lale Özren completed her master's degree in Spanish, Ancient American Studies and Turkology at the University of Hamburg in 1993. After various life and career stages as an entrepreneur in Spain, a specialist in digitalization in education, and a translator of series and films, she decided in 2017 to catch up on her doctoral studies, which continued the research from her master's thesis on parody and satire and extended it to contemporary Mexican "narco" literature. The PhD was successfully completed at the end of 2022. Currently, Lale Özren is intensively pursuing her translation and localization projects from Spanish and English into German.

Let's have a?

Expertise

  • Parody and satire
  • (National) Narratives
  • Narco literature

Of interest to

  • Literary scholars
  • Romance Studies scholars
  • People interested in Mexico

Interview

Niklas Heuser
Editor

In your dissertation, you examine Mexico's national myths on the basis of two novels. What is a national myth and to what extent can Revolución and Narcos be described as Mexican myths?

Lale Suzan Özren
is typing…
Niklas Heuser
Redakteur

In your dissertation, you examine Mexico's national myths on the basis of two novels. What is a national myth and to what extent can Revolución and Narcos be described as Mexican myths?

Lale Suzan Özren
Doktorandin

A national myth is a narrative that conveys meaning to all members of a community - in this case: a nation - thus becoming part of their world knowledge. In many cases, it is a founding myth, such as the „Revolución“. Since the end of the Mexican Revolution, the dissemination of the national narrative through mass media and politics has created an image with which the majority of the Mexican population can identify: The nation only became today's Mexican nation due to the rebellion and empowerment of the oppressed rural population and the indigenous communities. It is virtually the other way around with the myth of "Narcos": Certainly, the violence of the drug war does not define identity; however, the displayed wealth and omnipotence of the drug lords is also a narrative of social advancement, i.e., of empowerment.

Niklas Heuser
Redakteur

The novels „Los relámpagos de agosto“ by Jorge Ibargüengoitia and „Fiesta en la madriguera“ by Juan Pablo Villalobos treat the subjects of revolución and narcos with parodic and satirical means. Which effect does this have?

Lale Suzan Özren
Doktorandin

"Los relámpagos de agosto“ satirically denounces the post-revolutionary political haggling and power games via the parody of "autobiographies" — which often were self-congratulatory pamphlets of justification, written by former participants in the revolution; a genre that was very popular when „Los relámpagos de agosto“ was published.
"Fiesta en la madriguera" is set in the clandestine palace of a drug lord. The narrator of the novel, the drug lord’s little son, recounts atrocities of all kinds from his world - the only world he knows - in a naive chatty tone, thus showing the reader frighteningly how "normal" the Narco world can appear.
The black humor of both novels causes, like any good satire, a distanced point of view, and the liberating power of laughter makes it possible to cope with the shocking events of factual reality.

Niklas Heuser
Redakteur

How do you assess the influence of this kind of Mexican literature on Mexican society and its reality?

Lale Suzan Özren
Doktorandin

A parodistic-satirical approach makes it easier to question established opinions and national myths. One essential element of "mexicanidad," i.e., of a Mexican self-perception, is black humor that questions everything and everyone. Both novels offer a kind of self-affirmation of precisely this self-image. After all, it is only possible to avoid distress about omnipresent cruelty, violence, injustice, and impunity with a critical sense of humor. However, the influence of literature on today's society as a whole can certainly be considered small; therefore, film adaptations or a series could doubtlessly reach a broader public.

Abstract

The Mexican Revolution and its powerful myths, such as national hero Francisco "Pancho“ Villa, as well as the mythicized depictions of the omnipotent and dangerous drug lord, the narco, offer means of identification for parts of the Mexican population and shape their self-perception. Both national myths share the elements of rebellion against institutional power and the legitimization of violence, and will be understood as facets of a single myth in this dissertation.
Based on the premise that parody is a "response to power," this thesis highlights the disruptive aspects of parody and satire. Parallel to the parodistic rupture with literary genre conventions, the novels "Los relámpagos de agosto" by Jorge Ibargüengoitia (1964) and "Fiesta en la madriguera" by Juan Pablo Villalobos (2010) both satirically question the myths of Revolución and Narcos in the extrafictional world. The subversive and irreverent attitude of parody and satire is a disruptive force that can be understood as empowerment. At the same time, the aspect of empowerment is inherent in both myths: the violation of norms leads to emancipation from structures and traditional patterns.

Keywords

Literature, literature and society, revolution, revolución, narco, myth, Mexico, mexicanidad, parody, satire, Jorge Ibargüengoitia, Juan Pablo Villalobos

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The full text of this dissertation is available on OpenD. Online and OpenAccess.

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Suggested citation

Özren, Lale Suzan. Revolución und Narcos: nationale Mythen, Parodie und Satire in Jorge Ibargüengoitias Los relámpagos de agosto und Juan Pablo Villalobos’ Fiesta en la madriguera. Universität Hamburg, 2023.

Identifiers

https://doi.org/10.36197/OPEND.2023.001

doi: https://doi.org/10.36197/OPEND.2023.001