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Funes the Memorious (original Spanish title, Funes el memorioso) is a fantasy short story by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. It appeared in the 1944 anthology Ficciones, part two (Artifices). The title has also been translated as "Funes, His Memory". Jump to: navigation, search Look up fantasy on Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
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Jump to: navigation, search Jorge Luis Borges (, bôrâ²hÄs) (August 24, 1899 â June 14, 1986) was an Argentine writer who is considered to be one of the foremost writers of the 20th century. ...
Jump to: navigation, search 1944 was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Ficciones is the most popular anthology of short stories by Jorge Luis Borges, and is considered by many to be the best introduction to his work. ...
Summary
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Funes the Memorious tells the story of a fictional version of Borges himself as he meets Ireneo Funes, a teenage boy that lives in Fray Bentos, Uruguay, in 1884. Borges's cousin asks the boy for the time, and Funes replies instantly, without help from a watch, and accurately to the minute. Map of Uruguay, showing Fray Bentos as well as Montevideo Fray Bentos is a town in west Uruguay, close to the border with Argentina, and about 160 km (100 mi) due north of Buenos Aires. ...
1884 is a leap year starting on Tuesday (click on link to calendar). ...
Borges returns to Buenos Aires and comes back to Fray Bentos in 1887, intending to relax and study some Latin. He learns that Ireneo Funes has suffered a horse accident and is now crippled without hope. Soon enough, Borges receives a note from Funes, asking for the visitor to lend him some of his Latin books and a dictionary. Borges, disconcerted, sends Funes what he deems the most difficult works "in order fully to undeceive him". Buenos Aires (Good Airs in Spanish, originally meaning Fair Winds) is the capital of Argentina and its largest city and port, as well as one of the largest cities in South America. ...
Jump to: navigation, search 1887 is a common year starting on Saturday (click on link for calendar). ...
Latin was the language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. ...
Days later, Borges receives a telegram from Buenos Aires, requesting his return since his father is not well. As he packs, he remembers the books and goes to Funes's house. Funes's mother escorts him to a patio where Funes usually spends the dark hours. As he enters, Borges is greeted by the boy's voice speaking in perfect Latin, reciting "the first paragraph of the twenty-fourth chapter of the seventh book of the Historia Naturalis (by Pliny the Elder). Telegraphy (from the Greek words tele = far away and grapho = write) is the long distance transmission of written messages without physical transport of letters, originally over wire. ...
à Gaius Plinius Secundus, (23â79) better known as Pliny the Elder, was an ancient author and Natural philosopher of some importance who wrote Naturalis Historia. ...
Funes enumerates to Borges the cases of prodigious memory cited in the Historia Naturalis, and adds that he is marvelled that those are considered marvellous. He reveals that, since he fell from the horse, he perceives everything in full detail, and remembers it all. He remembers, for example, the shape of clouds at all given moments, as well as the associated perceptions (muscular, thermal, etc.) of the moment. Funes has an immediate intuition of the mane of a horse or the form of a constantly changing flame that is comparable to our (normal people's) intuition of a simple geometric shape such as triangle or a square. In order to kill time, Funes has engaged in projects such as reconstructing a full day's worth of past memories, and constructing a "system of enumeration" that gives each number a different, arbitrary name. Borges correctly points out to him that this is precisely the opposite of a system of enumeration, but Funes is incapable of such understanding. A poor, ignorant young boy in the outskirts of a small town in a backward country, he is hopelessly limited in his possibilities, but (says Borges) his absurd projects reveal "a certain stammering greatness". Funes, we are told, is incapable of Platonic ideas, of generalities, of abstraction; his world is one of intolerably uncountable details. He finds it very difficult to sleep, since he recalls "every crevice and every moulding of the various houses which [surround] him". Borges spends the whole night talking to Funes in the dark. When dawn shows Funes's face, only 19 years old, Borges sees him "as monumental as bronze, more ancient than Egypt, anterior to the prophecies and the pyramids".
Analysis Borges explores a variety of topics in the text, such as the need of generalization and abstraction to thought and science. However, he claims that Funes the Memorious is just a long parable about insomnia, which Borges himself suffered in real life, and which he references in several of his other stories and poems. Jump to: navigation, search For the novel by Stephen King, see Insomnia (novel); for the Norwegian movie and its American remake, see Insomnia (movie). ...
Reference - Funes, the Memorious - The Borges Collection at the University of Virginia Library. Full text of the story.
- Summary and analysis - From the Literature, Arts, & Medicine Database, an annotated bibliography of prose, poetry, film, video and art.
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