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The Feast of the Goat

By Mario Vargas Llosa

W Introduction Trujillo shows a character deeply preoccupied with his


own image.
Mario Vargas Llosa’s novel The Feast of the Goat (2000; The Feast of the Goat belongs to a tradition of Latin
English translation by Edith Grossman, 2001) is a multiface- American dictator novels, including Augusto Roa Bastos’s
ted novel about the individual and national trauma induced I the Supreme (1974), Alejo Carpentier’s Reasons of the
by the dictatorship of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo in the State (1974), and Gabriel García Márquez’s Autumn of
the Patriarch (1976). However, Vargas Llosa’s novel is a
Dominican Republic. The narrative reflects on the Trujillo
departure from magical realism, the style of Latin
dictatorship through three interwoven story lines. The first
American writers from the period known as the “Boom.”
belongs to Urania Cabral, a successful New York lawyer who The Feast of the Goat differs in two significant ways. First,
fled the Dominican Republic at the age of fourteen and according to Michael Wood in the London Review of
returns to her native country in 1996, ostensibly to visit her Books and Andrew Foley in the Journal of Literary Studies,
aged and ailing father, Agustin, who was once one of Vargas Llosa’s research grounds the story in reality rather
Trujillo’s closest advisers. The second belongs to Trujillo than a mythical abstraction. Bastos, Carpentier, and
himself, focusing largely on the last day of his life in 1961 García Márquez create pseudorealities for their despots,
whereas Vargas Llosa achieves a gritty, inescapable
and giving the reader direct insight into the consciousness of
realism for his. Second, Vargas Llosa’s organization
a corrupt but fascinating tyrant. The third story line follows signifies the complex connection between ruler and
the actions and memories of several of Trujillo’s assassins, ruled. The Cabral father-daughter relationship dramatizes
many of whom had once been loyal to the president and his the complicity of a tyrant’s subjects in supporting the
regime. As these distinct narrative threads finally intersect in regime. Also, the conspirators understand the heavy price
the last few chapters of the novel, they comment on the they have paid in serving Trujillo. Vargas Llosa weaves
insidious and far-reaching spiritual damage that is wrought the memories and actions of historical and fictional
by a cult of personality such as Trujillo’s.
characters to portray oppression and betrayal.

W Literary and Historical W Themes


Context The Feast of the Goat exhibits the tension between
nostalgia and trauma through the characters’ memories.
General Rafael Trujillo, also known as “the Goat,” ruled The novel opens in 1996 with Urania returning to the
the Dominican Republic from 1930 until his assassination Dominican Republic after thirty-five years. She revisits
on May 30, 1961. He officially led the country as her memories of the city, her childhood, and the event
president from 1930 to 1938 and from 1942 to 1952; that forced her departure. Over the course of a day she
while out of office, he controlled the Dominican Republic visits her father, now incapacitated by a stroke, as well as
through various puppet presidents. Trujillo was often her aunt and cousins. Every place Urania sees naturally
capricious, manipulating people to his own ends. His tests evokes memories. Some are pleasant; others have been
of loyalty, abusive quid pro quos, meant Trujillo could suppressed. She was victimized by Trujillo and, in a
demand the completion of atrocities that would serve the profound betrayal, by her father. Through remembering
republic and his personal goals. Vargas Llosa’s portrait of and confronting her past, the traumatic details are set in

431
The Feast of the Goat

MAJOR CHARACTERS

JOAQUIN BALAGUER is Trujillo’s puppet president and


supporter. Balaguer appears as a dutiful cipher; following
Trujillo’s assassination, however, he fills the power vacuum.

ANTONIO IMBERT BARRERA is a disillusioned politician who


becomes angry at the hypocrisy and cruelty of the Trujillo
regime. He joins other conspirators in plotting the Goat’s
death.
AGUSTIN CABRAL is General Trujillo’s former secretary of state
and part of the regime’s inner circle. He is complicit in the
atrocities at the hands of the country’s leader that are
revealed in the story.
URANIA CABRAL is the daughter of Agustin. Her family’s
experiences illustrate historical events of the Trujillo
government and its demise. Over the course of a day, her
long-held secret and reason for self-exile is revealed.

COLONEL JOHNNY ABBES GARCIA is head of Servicio


Inteligencia Militar (SIM), the Dominican Republic’s
intelligence service. He is a brutal and ruthless man,
“an arch-demon of great refinement,” according to Kirn.
As Trujillo’s enforcer, he does the dirty work.
AMADO GARCIA GUERRERO, or Amadito, is a disillusioned
army lieutenant. To prove his loyalty, he gave up his The central figure of The Feast of the Goat, Dominican Republic
beloved and later was forced to kill her brother. Following president Rafael Trujillo speaks to his countrymen about
Trujillo’s assassination, he and Maza fight the SIM communism. ª Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis
members who come to arrest them.
ANTONIO DE LA MAZA is one of Trujillo’s bodyguards. to those of the assassins’. In connecting these characters
Because his brother is killed in a government cover-up, he thematically, Vargas Llosa helps readers understand the
vows revenge. He elects death rather than capture and extent to which Trujillo’s evil penetrated society.
torture after Trujillo’s assassination. Trujillo’s cult of personality determines his gover-
GENERAL JOSE ROMAN, nicknamed Pupo, is a conspirator and nance. In this immoral regime, Agustin offers Trujillo his
vengeful former Trujillo supporter. He agrees to form a fourteen-year-old daughter as appeasement. Agustin is
provisional government as soon as he is shown Trujillo’s the victim of his own ambition, Urania is sacrificed, and
corpse. When that actually happens, however, Roman Trujillo’s impotence is witnessed by Urania. Humiliated,
freezes in apparent impotence. he deflowers her with his fingers and berates her in his
thoughts. Trujillo’s encounter with Urania is the crucible
GENERAL RAFAEL TRUJILLO, known as the Goat, the Chief,
and the Benefactor, is based on the historical dictator of
of the action in the novel. During Trujillo’s reign his
the Dominican Republic from 1930 to 1961. The novel supporters grew in power, but the costs became
depicts Trujillo’s political and personal life on his last day. intolerable. For Urania, confrontation with her past
assuages her psychological pain, while the assassins
RAMFIS TRUJILLO, the general’s son, is a well-known playboy. choose murder as their revenge.
Although a disappointment to Trujillo, he serves in the
military. He is also prominent in the vengeance-ridden post-

W Style
assassination developments.

The three interwoven story lines, delivered by an


omniscient narrator, are an affecting and effective style
front of the reader at the same time Urania is facing them. choice. Because the focus alternates between first Urania,
In another narrative thread, as the assassins anticipate then Trujillo, and finally the assassin-conspirators, the
their encounter with Trujillo, they privately remember individuals become part of a horrific tableau by the close
the events that have brought them to this vengeful point. of the novel. The tone of each strain is quite distinctive.
In this way, memory and motivation unite Urania’s story The narrative voice is sometimes very close, mirroring

432 TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY NOVELS: THE FIRST DECADE


The Feast of the Goat

the individual at hand, or is set at a measured distance,


allowing a sort of cinematic long shot. One of the
prominent overall effects is an understanding of how each ABOUT THE AUTHOR
individual’s story is also an important part of the overall
story of the Dominican Republic. Mario Vargas Llosa, born in Peru on March 28, 1936, is a
As Laura Miller notes in Salon, Vargas Llosa’s prolific novelist, journalist, social critic, and political activist. All
structure of two time frames and three distinct narrative of Latin America took notice when his groundbreaking novel
facets is “set up to deliver gobs of exposition.” The The Time of the Hero was published in 1963. The book won the
introspection of the characters offers a sort of intimacy Spanish Critics Award and the rage of Peru’s military. He soon
that is at times compelling (in Urania’s case) and at other rose to prominence during the Latin American “Boom.” Vargas
times repulsive (in Trujillo’s case, as when he tortures and Llosa’s many novels vary in tone, narrative style, and theme.
abuses people). This is also where the author’s mix of They include The Green House (1965), Aunt Julia and the
researched historical detail combined with his imaginative Scriptwriter (1982), The War at the End of the World (1985),
genius accumulates both weight and significance as the and Death in the Andes (1996). In 1990 Vargas Llosa ran for
story reaches its final scenes. The assassination of Trujillo the presidency in Peru but lost to Alberto Fujimori. Disheart-
comes roughly midway through the novel, but Vargas ened by Fujimori’s harsh rule, he moved to Spain. He also has
Llosa reinforces the continuance of the dictator’s influ- homes in London and in Lima, Peru. Vargas Llosa won the 2010
Nobel Prize in Literature.
ence by repeatedly shifting back to scenes of the living
Trujillo.

W Critical Reception Trujillo’s military. Most see Vargas Llosa’s narrative


choices as adeptly accomplished and praise his imagina-
Reviewers of The Feast of the Goat have been impressed by tive ventures into the thoughts of Urania, Trujillo, and
Vargas Llosa’s research of the atrocities attributed to the conspirators. Alan Cheuse of SFGate considers him a

This photograph shows the car in which Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo, the subject of The Feast of the Goat, was assassinated.
ª Bettmann/Corbis

TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY NOVELS: THE FIRST DECADE 433


The Feast of the Goat

“master of the intricate and complex relation of the far Miller, Laura. Rev. of The Feast of the Goat, by Mario
past to the near past and immediate present.” Vargas Llosa. Salon.com 6 Dec. 2002. Web. 6 Oct.
Reviewers seem united in their responses to the 2010.
heinous nature of Trujillo’s brutality and authoritarian- Wood, Michael. “Memories of a Skinny Girl.” London
ism. Laura Miller, in Salon, writes, “Never has a novel Review of Books. LRB Limited, 9 May 2002. Web.
drawn the malignant political potential of crude, unfet- 6 Oct. 2010.
tered masculinity more ferociously.” Critics also note
Trujillo’s physical weaknesses—incontinence and impo- Additional Resources
tence—suggesting these private embarrassments are the Criticism and Reviews
underpinnings of the dictator’s more public humiliation
Bell-Villada, Gene H. “Thirty-One Years of Solitude.”
of others.
Commonweal 128.19 (2001): 20-21. Rpt. in Con-
Most critics agree that Vargas Llosa maintains firm
temporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Janet Witalec. Vol.
stylistic control. Michael Wood writes in the London
181. Detroit: Gale, 2004. Literature Resource Center.
Review of Books that the “individual stories do build up a
Web. 11 Oct. 2010. Bell-Villada asserts that The Feast
satisfyingly intricate picture.” Also, as the novel “arrives at
of the Goat “will most surely become THE book
its truly mesmerizing pages . . . it’s no longer quite a
about the long Trujillo nightmare and the ongoing,
dictator novel . . . but it is an intensely intelligent political
sordid aftermath.”
novel.” The only one of the inner circle who escapes is
President Balaguer, Trujillo’s puppet. Walter Kirn, in the Hensher, Philip. “The Feast of the Goat. (Books:
New York Times, labels Balaguer an “unlikely savior” who Anatomy of a Tyrant).” Rev. of The Feast of the Goat,
undergoes “a transformation of dazzling subtlety that has by Mario Vargas Llosa. Spectator 30 Mar. 2002: 38+.
to be read twice to be appreciated.” Literature Resource Center. Web. 11 Oct. 2010.
Kirn describes Edith Grossman’s translation as Situates The Feast of the Goat well outside the popular
“crackling” and energized, whereas in Miller’s view the idea of the Latin American novel, noting its strengths,
prose is “clunky” at times, a weakness that is not helped obsessions, and direction.
by Grossman’s “wooden and often inept” translation. Howard, Gregory. Rev. of The Feast of the Goat, by Mario
Reviewers agree that Vargas Llosa has written an Vargas Llosa. Review of Contemporary Fiction 22.1
important novel, which can also be read, as Olga Lorenzo (2002): 120-21. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary
of the Age does, as a comment on the “irrational forces of Criticism. Ed. Janet Witalec. Vol. 181. Detroit: Gale,
dictatorship that can be understood.” 2004. Literature Resource Center. Web. 11 Oct.
2010. Howard describes The Feast of the Goat as “a
BIBLIOGRAPHY visceral lesson in the complex synergy of political
Works Cited intrigue, sex, machismo, and history.”
Cheuse, Alan. “Power Mad: Mario Vargas Llosa’s New Johnson-Wright, Heidi. “January Interview with Mario
Novel Serves Up the Horrors of Rafael Trujillo’s Vargas Llosa.” January Magazine Jan. 2002. Web.
Reign in the Dominican Republic.” Rev. of The Feast 10 Oct. 2010. An interview with Vargas Llosa that
of the Goat, by Mario Vargas Llosa. SFGate. Hearst contains commentary on his most recent work and his
Communications, 25 Nov. 2001. Web. 10 Oct. creative process.
2010. Kakutani, Michiko. “Storyteller Enthralled by the Power
Foley, Andrew. “Power, Myth and Freedom.” Rev. of of Art.” New York Times. New York Times, 7 Oct.
The Feast of the Goat, by Mario Vargas Llosa. Journal 2010. Web. 10 Oct. 2010. Offers a succinct overview
of Literary Studies 24.1 (2008): 1. Literature Resource and commentary on Vargas Llosa’s work and its
Center. Web. 6 Oct. 2010. legacy.
Jaggi, Maya. “Fiction and Hyper-reality.” Guardian Schwartz, Lynne Sharon. “Sensationalism and
[London]. Guardian News and Media Ltd, 16 Mar. Sensibility.” New Leader 84.6 (2001): 30-31. Rpt. in
2002. Web. 7 Oct. 2010. Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Janet Witalec.
Vol. 181. Detroit: Gale, 2004. Literature Resource
Kirn, Walter. “Generalissimo.” New York Times. New
Center. Web. 11 Oct. 2010. Takes issue with “the
York Times, 25 Nov. 2002. Web. 6 Oct. 2010.
unalloyed cruelty” detailed in The Feast of the Goat as
Lorenzo, Olga. “Dissection of a Despot.” Age “neither complex nor interesting, and lingering on its
[Melbourne]. Fairfax Media, 15 July 2002. Web. details yields easily to sensationalism.”
6 Oct. 2010. Shakespeare, Sebastian. Rev. of The Feast of the Goat, by
Menton, Seymour. Rev. of The Feast of the Goat, by Mario Vargas Llosa. New Statesman 131.4554
Mario Vargas Llosa. World Literature Today 74.3 (2002): 57. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism.
(2000): 676. General Onefile. Web. 8 Oct. 2010. Ed. Janet Witalec. Vol. 181. Detroit: Gale, 2004.

434 TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY NOVELS: THE FIRST DECADE


The Feast of the Goat

Literature Resource Center. Web. 8 Oct. 2010. Chaddick, Larissa, and Luis Rebasa-Soraluz. “Demons
Provides a mixed assessment of The Feast of the Goat, and Lies: Motivation and Form in Mario Vargas
noting that “even if this is not a great novel, Vargas Llosa.” Review of Contemporary Fiction Spring 1997:
Llosa is still a great storyteller.” 15. Literature Resource Center. Web. 10 Oct. 2010.
Torch, Rafael. Rev. of The Feast of the Goat, by Mario In this interview, Mario Vargas Llosa discusses his
Vargas Llosa. Antioch Review 60.2 (2002): 342-43. style and purposes in his fiction and recent nonfiction.
Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Janet He also responds to questions regarding the impor-
Witalec. Vol. 181. Detroit: Gale, 2004. Literature tance of the novel as a genre and touches directly on
Resource Center. Web. 11 Oct. 2010. Asserts that The the writing of Gustave Flaubert, Victor Hugo, García
Feast of the Goat is “full of the tremendous power of Márquez, and Franz Kafka.
the Latin American epic, and Vargas Llosa once again Chang, Jorge Villanueva, and Jimena Pinilla Cisneros.
delivers a sweeping statement about the turbulent “An Interview with Mario Vargas Llosa.” World
history of Latin America.” Literature Today 76.1 (2002): 64(6). General
OneFile. Web. 6 Oct. 2010. This interview features
Gale Resources Vargas Llosa’s comments on the resiliency of the
“Edith Marian Grossman.” Contemporary Authors novel form, how technology will affect publishing
Online. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Literature Resource books, and the contributions of several seminal
Center. Web. 6 Oct. 2010. writers such as Jorge Luis Borges, William Faulkner,
Marcel Proust, and Kafka.
“Mario Vargas Llosa.” Contemporary Authors Online.
Detroit: Gale, 2008. Literature Resource Center. Furtis, Richard Lee. Foundations of Despotism: Peasants,
Web. 8 Oct. 2010. the Trujillo Regime, and Modern Dominican History.
Stanford: Stanford UP, 2003. Print. This nonfiction
“Mario Vargas Llosa.” Literature Resource Center.
work looks beyond the Trujillo cult of personality and
Detroit: Gale, 2010. Web. 8 Oct 2010.
the oppressive state apparatus to find the basis for the
Open Web Sources political legitimacy of the Trujillo regime.
Vargas Llosa’s official Web site offers information on his García Márquez, Gabriel. Autumn of the Patriarch. New
novels and other publications, news links, and a short York: Harper, 1976. Print. Both a novel of the Latin
biography. http://www.mariovargasllosabooks. American literature period known as the “Boom” and
com/ one of the premier dictator novels, García Márquez’s
book is quite different in style but similar in topic to
The official site of the Nobel Prize committee features
The Feast of the Goat.
information on all laureates, including Vargas Llosa.
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laure Lopez-Calvo, Ignacio. God and Trujillo: Literal and
ates/2010/ Cultural Representations of the Dominican Dictator.
Gainesville: UP of Florida, 2005. Print. This nonfic-
The Complete Review holds a collection of reviews of The tion volume focuses on the personal and public life of
Feast of the Goat and links to the original publications. the dictator, as well as his known and probable
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/vargas/
psychological traits, and traces the history of Spanish-
fiestac.htm
American dictators in general and Trujillo in partic-
The Historical Text Archive offers a good overview of the ular.
political history of the Dominican Republic and the Robinson, Nancy P. “Origins of the International Day for
often unpleasant involvement of the United States. the Elimination of Violence against Women: The
http://historicaltextarchive.com/sections.php?o Caribbean Contribution.” Caribbean Studies 34.2
p=viewarticle&artid=362 (2006): 141+. Academic OneFile. Web. 8 Oct. 2010.
Oberlin College & Conservatory’s Web site presents Robinson traces the development of the international
sources and general resources on Latin America. human framework for women’s rights and explores
http://www.oberlin.edu/faculty/svolk/latinam.htm the origins of the International Day for the Elimina-
tion of Violence against Women in the Latin
For Further Reading American context, through the life stories of the
Alvarez, Julia. In the Time of the Butterflies. New York: Mirabal sisters in the Dominican Republic.
Plume, 1994. Print. Three of the four Mirabal sisters
were murdered by Trujillo’s henchmen in November Adaptations

1960 for their involvement in efforts to topple the The Feast of the Goat. Dir. Luis Llosa. Perf. Isabella
Trujillo regime. Alvarez’s fictionalization of their Rossellini, Paul Freeman, Stephanie Leonidas, Tomas
story won the National Book Critics Circle Award in Milian. Future Film Group, 2005. Film. Director Luis
1994. Llosa, an accomplished filmmaker and the novelist’s

TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY NOVELS: THE FIRST DECADE 435


The Feast of the Goat

brother-in-law, trims the triple focus of the original adaptation of The Feast of the Goat is a critically
work to two dovetailed stories—those of Urania and acclaimed presentation by the father-daughter team
the conspiracy to kill Trujillo. True to the novel is the of Jorge and Victoriana Triana. In 2007 the produc-
creation of the atmosphere of terror, sycophancy, and tion moved to Lima, Peru, also to great acclaim.
savagery that pervaded Dominican society for more A prominent feature of the stage production is that
than three decades. the same actor who portrays Agustin Cabral also
The Feast of the Goat. Adapt. and dir. Jorge Triana. plays the dictator Trujillo.
Repertorio Español. 2003 and 2007. Performance.
New York City’s Repertorio Español’s stage Marta Lauritsen

436 TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY NOVELS: THE FIRST DECADE

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