Isabel Allende's latest
historical novel, My Name Is Emilia del Valle, presents universal themes
such as the spirit of adventure, the sense of identity, and the inseparability
of family ties. Set in the final decades of the 19th century, the title
character, Emilia Delle, travels from San Francisco to Chile, ravaged by civil
wars, in search of her roots. At a time when women were not allowed the freedom
of self-autonomy or the right to intervene in society, Emilia undertakes a long
journey alone as part of asserting her rights and searching for personal
identity. She is ready to enter a realm of action that was considered
male-centric and almost exclusively male. As such, she is a character far ahead
of her times.
Emilia was born in 1866
to an Irish woman preparing to enter a convent in San Francisco and a Chilean
aristocrat, but she took her loving stepfather, 'Papo,' for her father. The
novel makes it clear that her intellectual and independent personality is a result
of that upbringing. Emilia, who wrote pulp fiction under a male pseudonym
before becoming a journalist, travels to the Chilean conflict zone with two
intentions: writing about the emotional realities of war as a professional
columnist and discovering her estranged biological father, whom her mother had
told her about. But what Emilia sees and experiences is beyond what she could
have imagined.
In this writing that has
the dignity of following historical events in detail, the bloody battle between
President José Manuel Balmaceda's army and the rebels, the coup, the rivers of
blood, the torture chambers, and the ordeals are all included. Not only Emilia,
but other main characters, such as her colleague and lover Eric, are also
victimized by near-death incarcerations. Beyond the background, the novelist
captures the concrete experiences of the conflicts. The depiction of Emilia's
'death,' as she arrives at the torture chamber amid the chaos and violence that
follows the rebel army's victory, is reminiscent of classics such as
Dostoevsky's The House of the Dead. Similarly, Emilia’s search for her
father and her identity, intertwined with a larger historical catastrophe,
invites comparison with W.G. Sebald’s Austerlitz. Like Austerlitz,
Emilia’s journey is both personal and historical, as she uncovers truths about
herself while confronting the violent past of a nation. However, while Austerlitz
is haunted by the impossibility of full recollection, Emilia actively writes
her own story, turning her memories into resistance against erasure.
While Emilia joins the
female fighters who lean towards the official military faction, Eric joins the
rebels. However, the fact that both sides display astonishing inhumanity to
each other, and that Emilia and Eric are subjected to horrific torture in separate
places, makes it clear that war does not justify either side. Emilia is a
character who embodies Allende's mastery of characterization. She is
simultaneously vulnerable, strong, innocent, and worldly-wise. Her journey from
pulp fiction writer to fearless journalist is a testament to her determination
and resilience despite societal constraints. The slow-paced emotional intensity
that is a hallmark of Isabel Allende's work can be seen in the dynamics of the
relationship between Emilia and her fellow journalist Eric Welan. At a time
when even the first wave of feminism was in its infancy, she establishes a
heroine who has no qualms about her choices. Emilia moves forward by firmly
believing that she does not need anyone's validation for her personality, and
by openly asserting this, both in her family and in her love.
Allende's skill in
creating exquisite characters even with minimal details is well known. This is
evident in the characterizations of Francisco Claro (Papo), Emilia’s biological
father Gonzalo Andres, mother Molly Walsh (whom everyone called Molly Brown,
reminiscent of the Unsinkable Molly Brown), the enigmatic figure of the elder
aunt Polina Delvalle, the mysterious sailor Captain Janus who takes Emilia to
the far-away, unknown land that her father bequeathed her, Emilia’s first lover
and Eric’s brother Oven Wealan, who believed only in free relationships without
any bondage, and, among others, Engelita Ailaf, the member of the Canteen
Girls, the women fighters who centered their activities in Valparaíso, who
offered crucial support in saving Emilia's life and perished in the ravages of
the war.
The ending of the novel,
which marks the masterful use of magical realism, seems to be the end of the
investigation, but it contains many clues. Emilia's journey in search of the
ancestral land, which her biological father left behind somewhere in the highland on the
Chilean-Argentine border, gives the impression of being in some mythical land.
The mysterious personality of Captain Janus makes it even more powerful. A
journey with an unknown boatman along a misty river can feel like a passage
from the mundane world to another, transcendental world. The only being she has
with her is her pet dog, Covadonca, who waited for her, starving, during her
difficult times and even in long days of imprisonment. All these images—the
fog, the river, the unknown boatman, the dog, the mysterious guide who retreats
immediately after taking her to the boatman—are reminiscent of the mythical
journey to the underworld.
The mythical
otherworldliness of her final passage recalls images of Lethe, but there is no
absolute break. Unlike the waters of forgetting, Emilia does not lose her past,
nor does she shy away from writing it down—for the record of humanity, perhaps?
In this way, her journey mirrors that of Austerlitz, where remembering,
even in fragments, becomes an act of survival. However, the novel also suggests
another possibility: rather than a journey of no return, Emilia's transition
into the indigenous world could be a rebirth. This is indicated by the fact that
the Mapuche tribe gives her a new name ('Ailen': the spirit of joy, clarity,
and the warm glow of smoldering fire in their language), reinforcing her
transformation into someone who bridges different worlds. This is also echoed
in her final conversation with Eric:
“For God’s sake, Emilia, what are you doing here?”
“Writing. Don’t panic—I have not lost my mind.”
He finds her writings, filled with scrawl, in three
notebooks.
This final revelation underscores that Emilia, like
Austerlitz, refuses to let history be forgotten. Instead, she turns memory into
a living force, ensuring that her past—and the past of those lost in war—will
not fade into obscurity.
Furthermore, Emilia’s
retreat into the natural world suggests an ecofeminist undercurrent. Her
departure from the violent, industrialized world into the more harmonious
landscape of the indigenous Mapuche people represents not just a personal
rebirth but a return to an existence more in tune with nature. The novel subtly
critiques the destruction wrought by modernization and war, juxtaposing it with
the wisdom and sustainability of indigenous ways of life. Emilia’s acceptance
into the Mapuche community, and her new name, signal a reconnection with a
world where human existence is inseparable from the rhythms of nature,
reinforcing an ecofeminist vision of survival, resilience, and renewal.
The novel’s ecofeminist
theme recalls other masterpieces such as The Kingdom of This World by
Alejo Carpentier, The Storyteller by Mario Vargas Llosa, and The
Strange Case of Billy Biswas by Arun Joshi. Carpentier presents Afro-Caribbean
spirituality as emblematic of nature’s vitality, resisting European rationalism
and colonial exploitation. Llosa’s novel follows the Machiguenga people of the
Peruvian Amazon, whose oral traditions and ecological harmony stand in contrast
to the dominant Western logic of development. The Machiguenga storyteller
serves as a guardian of myths, preserving the sacredness of nature through oral
tradition. Similarly, in Joshi’s novel, Billy rejects urban rationalist
civilization in favor of an indigenous existence, undergoing a metaphysical transformation
that fosters a mystical unity with the forest, defying Western materialism.
In terms of female agency,
Carpentier’s Vodou priestesses and African traditions embody a non-patriarchal
spiritual force, countering colonial and dictatorial violence. Llosa’s indigenous
women, though marginalized, play a central role in preserving oral traditions
and ecological wisdom. In Joshi’s novel, tribal women represent a freer, less
commodified existence, with Billy’s relationship with Bilasia offering an escape
from patriarchal constraints in mainstream Indian society.
Despite their distinct cultural and historical contexts, these novels collectively envision an alternative, nature-centered, and mythic worldview, often led by feminine and indigenous forces, offering a spiritual and ethical counterbalance to oppressive systems. This shared vision also serves as a key link between these works and Isabel Allende’s novel, the subject of discussion here.
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