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COMMON ASPECTS OF MAGICAL REALIST NOVELS AND FILMS The following elements are found in many magical realist novels and films, but not all are found in all of them and many are found in novels or films that could fall under other genres.
Note that it is common in some Fantasy stories to include a Frame Story , in which the central, fantastic story is explained as a Dream . Because the main story works equally well with or without the Frame Story , and since either way the reader feels no ambiguity about choosing between the ''magical'' and the ''real'' interpretation, these are usually ''not'' included in the category of ''magical realism''. RELATION TO OTHER GENRES AND MOVEMENTS As a literary style, magical realism often overlaps or is confused with other genres and movements.
HISTORY The term ''magic realism'' was first used by the German art critic Franz Roh to refer to a painterly style also known as Neue Sachlichkeit . It was later used to describe the unusual realism by American painters such as Ivan Albright , Paul Cadmus , George Tooker and other artists during the 1920s . It should be noted though that unlike the term's use in literature, in art it is describing paintings that do ''not'' include anything fantastic or magical, but are rather extremely realistic and often times mundane. The term was first revived and applied to the realm of fiction as a combination of the fantastic and the realistic in the 1960s by a Venezuelan essayist and critic Arturo Uslar-Pietri , who applied it to a very specific South American genre, influenced by the blend of realism and fantasy in Mário De Andrade 's influential 1928 novel ''Macunaíma.'' However, the term itself came in vogue only after Nobel Prize winner Miguel Angel Asturias used the expression to define the style of his novels. The term gained popularity with the rise of such authors as Mikhail Bulgakov , Ernst Jünger , and many Latin America n writers, most notably Jorge Luis Borges , Isabel Allende , Juan Rulfo , Dias Gomes , and Gabriel García Márquez , who confessed, "My most important problem was destroying the lines of demarcation that separates what seems real from what seems fantastic." The most widely read of the South American magical realism narratives is García Márquez's novel '' One Hundred Years Of Solitude ''. Today, ''magical realism'' is perhaps too broadly used, to characterize all realistic fictions with an eerie, otherworldly component, such as the tales of Edgar Allan Poe , or realistic fictions where magic is simply an overt theme in the narrative, such as '' The Stepford Wives '' or the Harry Potter books. PAINTING In painting, magical realism is a term often used interchangeably with Post-expressionism . In 1925 , art critic Franz Roh used this term to describe painting which signaled a return to Realism after Expressionism 's extravagances which sought to redesign objects to reveal the spirits of those objects. Magical realism, according to Roh, instead faithfully portrays the exterior of an object, and in doing so the spirit, or magic, of the object reveals itself. Other important aspects of magical realist painting, according to Roh, include:
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