Magic Realism
Related Category: Latin American Literature
primarily Latin American literary movement that arose in the 1960s. The term has been attributed to the Cuban writer Alejo
Carpentier, who first applied it to Latin-American fiction in 1949. Works of magic realism mingle realistic portrayals of ordinary events and characters with elements of fantasy and myth, creating a rich, frequently disquieting world that is at once familiar and dreamlike. The movement's best-known proponent is the Colombian novelist Gabriel
García Márquez, who has used the technique many times, most famously in his novel
One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967). Other magic realist writers include Guatemala's Miguel Ángel
Asturias, Argentina's Julio
Cortázar, and Mexico's Carlos
Fuentes. Non-Latin American writers whose fiction often employs magic realism include Italo
Calvino and Salman
Rushdie.