In the book Chronicles of a Death Foretold, Gabriel Marquez manipulates his characters in a systematic fashion that unveil the universal occurrence of societal pressure that forces categorized people into specific classes. An important element Marquez often alludes to is the abstract notion of honor, which holds a relatively high importance to those tied designated to the male gender in Latin America. On the other side of the spectrum, marianismo is the idealized female trait, often leading to suppression and objectification in Latin America. On the contrary of the ideologies of society, this book reveals basic human instincts and actions, cultivated by culture. Marquez uses his fundamental organization of the text …show more content…
So, to inflate their honor, the machismo twins set off to an adventure to kill Santiago. But in reality, they didn’t want to do so. Having hope in the righteousness in the society they lived in, they believed someone would stop their tracks. “‘Don’t be silly,’ he said to her. ‘Those two aren’t about to kill anybody, much less someone rich’” (Marquez 55). In fact, many people had doubted them, such as the narrator, and in relation, Angela herself. “Their reputation as good people was so well-founded that no one paid any attention to them” (Marques 52), if Angela pinned the molester to a stronger figure, the twins would be too afraid to honorably kill Santiago, and rupture their honor. The twins had lived in a society which expected them to display machismo actions, such as killing for their honor. Ironically, the society that taught them to be this way, had doubted the twins could display their machismo-eaque behaviors. Furthermore, people failed to execute their responsibility due to the fragile hopes of these points as a misunderstanding of some sort. This common theme often coincides with