From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hive
First edition
Author Camilo José Cela
Original titleLa colmena
Country Argentina
Language Spanish
SeriesCaminos inciertos
Genre Experimental novel
PublisherEmecé Ediciones, S.A.
Publication date
1950
Media typePrint ( Hardback & Paperback)
Pages350 pp (Spanish paperback edition)
ISBN 84-7039-436-3 (Spanish paperback edition)
OCLC 12969993
LC ClassPQ6605.E44 C6 1984

The Hive ( Spanish: La colmena) (also translated as The Beehive) is a novel written by the Spanish author Camilo José Cela, first published in 1950. [1]

Summary

The novel is set in Madrid in 1943, after the end of the Spanish Civil War, and deals with the poverty and general unhappiness found in Spain by examining a multitude of fictional characters in varying levels of detail. It is notable in that it contains over 300 characters and is considered to be the most important novel written in post–civil war Spain. Because of rigorous censorship Cela was unable to get La colmena published in his native Spain, and was instead forced to publish it in Buenos Aires.

The book consists of six chapters and an epilogue. Each chapter contains a number of short passages describing short episodes and focusing on a particular character. In this way a series of insignificant events and characters work together to form an important conclusion, much in the same way that a hive of bees works together to achieve something much more than they could achieve individually.

Structure

The novel itself is composed of two hundred and fifteen fragments separated by a blank space, grouped into seven chapters of different lengths.

Chapter Number of sequences
I 47
II 46
III 25
IV 41
V 28
VI 9
Final 19
Total 215
Chapter Number of sequences

Time

The events of La Colmena occur in three days in December 1943, a date deduced from a news story which Rómulo the bookseller reads in a newspaper, where Martín Marco's proclamation also appears. The newspaper also informs us of the Tehran conference between the world leaders. However, because there are no more facts, the time of the story is offered to the reader in a vague manner: it is set in the first years of post war Spain, and in fact it could have been set anywhere between 1941 and 1945.

The duration of the story is brief as everything happens over the course of three days. The first six chapters happen in two days and the last occurs three or four days later. But the most significant thing is the chronological disorder, as facts are not told in the manner which they happen. If you were to read the novel in a traditional manner, you would need to re-order the chapters in the following order: I, II, IV, VI, III, V, Final.

Language and style

Lexicon

Register

In La Colmena, Cela combines two linguistic levels, the cultured and the popular. One way of examining the novel would be in this manner:

Manner of speech Voice of the Level
Narration, description Narrator Literary
Dialogues, monologues Character Colloquial

English translations

  • The Hive, trans. J. M. Cohen with Arturo Barea (Farrar, Straus and Young, 1953; Dalkey Archive, 2001)
  • The Hive, trans. James Womack (New York Review Books, 2023)

In popular culture

In The Hive there are references to the world of film, actors, and spectators. The Hive was made into a film directed by Mario Camus in 1982.

References

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hive
First edition
Author Camilo José Cela
Original titleLa colmena
Country Argentina
Language Spanish
SeriesCaminos inciertos
Genre Experimental novel
PublisherEmecé Ediciones, S.A.
Publication date
1950
Media typePrint ( Hardback & Paperback)
Pages350 pp (Spanish paperback edition)
ISBN 84-7039-436-3 (Spanish paperback edition)
OCLC 12969993
LC ClassPQ6605.E44 C6 1984

The Hive ( Spanish: La colmena) (also translated as The Beehive) is a novel written by the Spanish author Camilo José Cela, first published in 1950. [1]

Summary

The novel is set in Madrid in 1943, after the end of the Spanish Civil War, and deals with the poverty and general unhappiness found in Spain by examining a multitude of fictional characters in varying levels of detail. It is notable in that it contains over 300 characters and is considered to be the most important novel written in post–civil war Spain. Because of rigorous censorship Cela was unable to get La colmena published in his native Spain, and was instead forced to publish it in Buenos Aires.

The book consists of six chapters and an epilogue. Each chapter contains a number of short passages describing short episodes and focusing on a particular character. In this way a series of insignificant events and characters work together to form an important conclusion, much in the same way that a hive of bees works together to achieve something much more than they could achieve individually.

Structure

The novel itself is composed of two hundred and fifteen fragments separated by a blank space, grouped into seven chapters of different lengths.

Chapter Number of sequences
I 47
II 46
III 25
IV 41
V 28
VI 9
Final 19
Total 215
Chapter Number of sequences

Time

The events of La Colmena occur in three days in December 1943, a date deduced from a news story which Rómulo the bookseller reads in a newspaper, where Martín Marco's proclamation also appears. The newspaper also informs us of the Tehran conference between the world leaders. However, because there are no more facts, the time of the story is offered to the reader in a vague manner: it is set in the first years of post war Spain, and in fact it could have been set anywhere between 1941 and 1945.

The duration of the story is brief as everything happens over the course of three days. The first six chapters happen in two days and the last occurs three or four days later. But the most significant thing is the chronological disorder, as facts are not told in the manner which they happen. If you were to read the novel in a traditional manner, you would need to re-order the chapters in the following order: I, II, IV, VI, III, V, Final.

Language and style

Lexicon

Register

In La Colmena, Cela combines two linguistic levels, the cultured and the popular. One way of examining the novel would be in this manner:

Manner of speech Voice of the Level
Narration, description Narrator Literary
Dialogues, monologues Character Colloquial

English translations

  • The Hive, trans. J. M. Cohen with Arturo Barea (Farrar, Straus and Young, 1953; Dalkey Archive, 2001)
  • The Hive, trans. James Womack (New York Review Books, 2023)

In popular culture

In The Hive there are references to the world of film, actors, and spectators. The Hive was made into a film directed by Mario Camus in 1982.

References


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