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Paz, Octavio 1914–: Critical Essay by Richard J. Callan

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About 4 pages (1,085 words)
The Labyrinth of Solitude Summary

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[In Labyrinth of Solitude] Paz shifts the focus of his analysis away from the Mexican ethos to a universal level, recognizing that the problems he has been discussing are basic to human nature.

Paz develops his central ideas, solitude and search for communion, as follows: the foetus, at one with the world that surrounds it, senses loss and rejection at birth. As self-consciousness develops, this original sensation turns into one of loneliness. Self-awareness means solitude, and because of our solitude, we yearn to transcend ourselves…. All our being longs to escape from the opposites that tear at us and to be reborn to the fullness of being in which life, death, time, eternity, and all other dualities are reconciled. Love …, which takes us out of ourselves, is a craving for communion, a need to die and be reborn in the other; and in the union of love, a union of opposites, man perceives, if only for an instant, that more perfect state which has been lost. (p. 916)

This is a free excerpt of 168 words. There are 1,085 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Paz, Octavio 1914–: Critical Essay by Richard J. Callan from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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