Chronicle of a Death Foretold (1982) by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is set in a small Columbian town. The novel revolves around the murder of Santiago Nasser for the defilement of Angela Vicarico. The importance of honor to the culture depicted in the novel is evident throughout the story. Santiago's murder is motivated and justified by honor.
Honor has different values and meaning in the context of different cultures. In Chronicle of a Death Foretold, set in a Latin culture, the adherence to family honor and values are viewed as one of the highest moral obligations. Events in the book are provoked by the idea of fulfilling the expectations brought on by the honor of family traditions.
Angela's marriage to Bayardo San Roman was arranged, she did not wish to marry him. Bayardo came from a wealthy and prestigious family and has come to town to find a bride. When Bayardo awoke from his afternoon siesta one day and saw Angela and her mother. Pura, crossing the town square he was smitten by her beauty. He asked the landlady who the young one was and then told her "When I wake up remind me that I'm going to marry her" (p. 29).
Bayardo's courtship strategy consisted of charming Angela's family. "Angela never forgot the horror of the night on which her parents and her older sisters with their husbands, gathered together in the parlor, imposed on her the obligation to marry a man she had barely seen" (p. 34). Her parent's asserted that "a family dignified by modest means had no right to distain that prize of destiny" (p. 34). When Angela protested that she did not love Bayardo her mother responded, "Love can be learned too" (p.35). So her commitment...
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