Preview

The Gospel According to Mark

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
2574 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Gospel According to Mark
Jorge Luis Borges
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MARK (1970)
Translated by Norrnan Thomas di Giovanni in collaboration with the author

Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986), an outstanding modern writer of Latin America, was born in Buenos Aires into a family prominent in Argentine history. Borges grew up bilingual, learning English from his English grandmother and receiving his early education from an English tutor. Caught in Europe by the outbreak of World War II, Borges lived in Switzerland and later Spain, where he joined the Ultraists, a group of experimental poets who renounced realism. On returning to Argentina, he edited a poetry magazine printed in the form of a poster and affixed to city walls. For his opposition to the regime of Colonel Juan Peron, Borges was forced to resign his post as a librarian and was mockingly offered a job as a chicken inspector. In 1955, after Peron was deposed, Borges became director of the national library and Professor of English Literature at the University of Buenos Aires. Since childhood a sufferer from poor eyesight, Borges eventually went blind. His eye problems may have encouraged him to work mainly in short, highly crafed forms: stories, essays, fables, and lyric poems full of elaborate music. His short stories, in Ficciones (1944), El hacedor (1960); translated as Dreamtigers, (1964), and Labyrinths (1962), have been admired worldwide.

These events took place at La Colorada ranch, in the southern part of the township of Junin, during the last days of March 1928. The protagonist was a medical student named Baltasar Espinosa. We may describe him, for now, as one of the common run of young men from Buenos Aires, with nothing more noteworthy about him than an almost unlimited kindness and a capacity for public speaking that had earned him several prizes at the English school0 in Ramos Mejia. He did not like arguing, and preferred having his listener rather than himself in the right. Although he was fascinated

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Bruce Fisk’s The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Jesus: Reading the Gospels on the Ground, takes readers on a journey through the Holy Land from the perspective of Norm, who sets out to study both what is behind the Gospels while following the path of Jesus and scholars before him. Norm looks to determine a first-hand perspective of the historical Jesus and of the Gospels, not accepting or denying previous teachings, but hoping that he can determine the validity of his own beliefs as he determines what they may be. Contrasting historical text with New Testament scholars, the book gives readers an enjoyable perspective on a subject that has tirelessly been taught throughout the ages.…

    • 605 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rigoberta

    • 642 Words
    • 3 Pages

    political power of the rich have taking over the Indian’s and their land. The guerrillas maintained feudal conditions through violence and intimidation, the army held the populace in a constant state of fear.blindly kills anyone who tries to help the peasants, murdering all the doctors and priests that enter the villages. They do so to keep the peasants in ignorance, to prevent them from learning another way of life. Lacking knowledge of the outside world ensures that the peasants will remain in the plantations, because fear of the unknown is stronger than fear of the known. As Dr. Fuentes realizes what has been going on in his country, he see’s how ignorant he has been on the political status of his country. He realizes through Padre Portillo that his innocents in this case was a sin. He sent his students out into the country to save lives, but never prepared them for the conditions they were walking into. In the end after finding all his students were killed, he realized by being blind to the outside world he left behind…

    • 642 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While being in New York he receipts his first poem and its about how nothing has changed with slavery in Cuba.(“Jose Marti…

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Have you ever read the short memoirs; “Barrio Boy” and “No Gumption”? If you have read the memoirs, do you ever wonder what the differences and the similarities are in between these two very well written books? There are many differences and similarities about the books “Barrio Boy” and “No Gumption”. We can take into account that the obvious similarities between the two memoirs is that they are written in first person narration and about conquering your difficulties. Ernesto Galarza and Russell Baker both are excellent writers that wrote these two memoirs, as this essay goes down, the similarities and differences of the memoirs will make a good impression.…

    • 785 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He was an activist in the liberation movements of Puerto Rico and Cuba. To help the island's independence,he founded a cultural and political group called the Las dos Antillas. But soon after Cuba’s revolution collapsed and Puerto-Rico was yielded to the U.S. He then turned his attention to the African American community but while he was in school he was told by one of his teachers that blacks made no accomplishments and that we had no history. With this in mind he was inspired to prove that her statement was false by collecting books, manuscripts, etchings, and memorabilia related to the history of black people.…

    • 541 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While there is certainly debate about whether or not Jews were the primary audience for the gospel of John, there are many who do believe that John is the most Jewish of the four gospels. For example, Steve Wertheim, of Jews for Jesus related the following observation:…

    • 735 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In writing my essay on comparing and contrasting the differences of the three endings in Mark, with all of them beginning in the 16th chapter of Mark, one can see many things. In chapter 16 of Mark you have three different version the earliest starting at the on the first verse ending in the 8th verse. It plainly explains what happens as all of them being started on a Monday day, the day after the Sabbath. That is when three women, Mary Magdalene, Mary mother of James and Salome, were going to go to the tomb of Jesus to anoint his body. When they arrived at the tomb it was open with a boy in a white robe sitting on the right side of the tomb. They were amazed and alarmed, when he spoke to them telling them not to be alarmed as they were stating that Jesus was not there. He then told them to go tell the disciples, and Peter, that he was going ahead to galilee and that they would see him there. But the women were very afraid and they did the opposite. “ So they went out and started running from the tomb, because trembling and astonishment overwhelmed them, and they said nothing to anyone, since they were afraid”. What you have here is the first of the three different ending in which did not end successfully.…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gospel of John

    • 460 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The Case for Christ I found the information revealed to be quite informative and for me, largely new as I’ve never researched these areas directly. There is plenty of evidence presented on each topic and Strobel uses each interview to explore a number of angles from the skeptics perspective to ensure he looks for answers to the most common questions that relate to every interview topic. The experts range greatly but are primarily scholars and authors of various books with published content on each relevant topic. They have years of research and study on each area and are well suited to answer Strobel’s questions. Because the format of the book is written as a narrative description of these interviews with each expert. I found this part a bit of a stumble as it doesn’t carry much between each topic. There is some reference between the chapters and evidence presented that builds on previous findings but they are large separate individual chapters. This made the book a bit harder for me to really get since aside from the particle topic in each chapter there wasn’t any kind of story and building component to the book. This still worked very well and definitely makes a focus on purpose to address each of the questions, it just took more to keep me interested. I think some of that was due to the historical nature, as I have little to no interest in history and find it quite boring to read about so I got more than my share in one or two chapters. There isn’t too much of this historical componetn though so it didn’t hold me back from continuing through the book and exploring each of the questions with great interest.…

    • 460 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Mexican Revolution occurred around the 1930s to the 1990s and during this time the United States imperialism and notion of civilization and progress was taking place in Mexico. The three main characters each have different stories and different reasons for being in Mexico to achieve redemption. Ambrose Bierce also known as the old gringo was a journalist for William Hearst in the 1900s. His whole family left him because they were so shamed by what he wrote. He describes his writing as mocking God, his Homeland, and Money; and his family thought when would they be next for him to go against them, judging them, telling them their no exception, they prove the rule, and are all part of the ludicrous filth, the farts of God, we call humanity. (Fuentes, p.75) Some of the family left him through death and others left by just choosing to never see him again. The old gringo joked, “I think my sons killed themselves so I wouldn’t ridicule them in the newspapers of my boss William Randolph Hearst” (Fuentes, p. 73). Through his journey of redemption he met up with General Tomás Arroyo’s revolutionary group on the Miranda hacienda in northern Mexico. His plan of redemption was through death, “He wanted to die because everything he loved died before him” (Fuentes, p. 37)…

    • 1671 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before Night Falls Essay

    • 1376 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Arenas writes this book through his imaginations and pastimes in Cuba as if it were his diaries. He analyzes his secrecy with artistic writing and sex. Reinaldo Arenas says, My sexual activity was all with animals. First there were the hens, then the goats and the sows, and after I had grown up some more, the mares (Arenas 149).” This shows the indifference towards women and the rest of the societies interests. In other words, Reinaldo was a homosexual and hid through his fear of the totalitarian government by taking his pain out with the animals. This book represents Reinaldo’s search for…

    • 1376 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The highlights of the newspaper were always Angelita’s coronation, the Free World Fair of Peace, Flor de Oro’s adventures in New York. One Saturday after another, as I sat on my patio, I noticed several of my Haitian neighbors were slowly whisked away by Trujillo’s soldiers to become a memory of the past. From the machetes the soldiers were carrying, I knew it was better to turn the volume up on my radio and not ask any questions of my neighbors. Meanwhile, Sunday morning’s, my family and I in our best clothes went to Church and prayed to God and Trujillo. In the afternoon, my wife, daughters and I would sit in the rusty wooden park bleachers while cheering on our sons as they played in…

    • 1635 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In today's culture the Christian gospel is perceived as being of the good news of Gods grace and mercy that he had bestowed over our lives. It relays a message that God died from our sins they we may be saved and dwell in the house of The Lord.…

    • 431 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    “The South” by Jorge Luis Borges portrays the life of Juan Dahlmann, a librarian from Buenos Aires, wherein a sequence of unfortunate events brings him, eventually and triumphantly, to the South. But the story might be as mundane as Dahlmann’s northern life without its stunning conclusion: rather than living happily in the South like he’s always longed for, Dahlmann willingly dies the first night he gets there. Dahlmann dies just before his promised life can even begin, yet he finds joy in it. His bizarre mindset, then, demands explanation and exploration. Dahlmann, in fact, in his journey falsely sees the sustenance of his romantic, “profoundly Argentine” dream—courage and freedom—in the savagery and resignation of the real South, thereby…

    • 1974 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    A disciple is a person who follows and loves Jesus and helps to spread the teachings of what Jesus taught. They are a member of the new community, and they become more and more like Jesus through a life of faith and obedience. Jesus taught that the life of a disciple must be like his own, which is a journey to the cross: a disciple must ‘take up his cross and follow' (8:34-35). St Mark's Gospel helps us understand the nature of discipleship through various stories concerning the disciples. Jesus required a tremendous amount of commitment in order for anyone to be accepted as a disciple, which is why he only ended up with a few deeply committed followers. It was a commitment to be dedicated to Jesus, who had no self interest but was more concerned…

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    We can analyze the similarities and divergences between the Gospel of John and the Synoptic Gospel of Mark with Christology, Anthropology, Soteriolgy, and Eschatology. Even though many of the passages could refer to more than just one theology, it is achievable to separate the different theologies into the four categories. Regardless of how different the Gospel of John is to that of Mark, Matthew, and Luke, it can be concluded that John does have obvious relations to the Gospel of Mark, even though it was written much earlier.…

    • 1971 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays