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Jorge Luis BorgesA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Borges enjoyed using word play; as an Ultraist, he used words sparingly in his works while delivering a high impact of meaning. This can be seen in the story’s title, which not only describes the physical location of the story—a temple in the shape of a circle—but also refers to “The Circular Ruins” as a metaphor for creation.
Circles appear throughout the story, forming a motif that Borges uses to tie different elements together. He first describes the temple as a “circular enclosure, crowned by the stone figure of a horse or tiger” (214). Then, when the protagonist starts to dream, he is surrounded by “a circular amphitheater, which [is] somehow the ruined temple” (216), highlighting how, in dreams, objects can be two things at once. Later, the protagonist prays to the temple statue twice a day, “imagining perhaps that his unreal son perform[s] identical rituals in other circular ruins, downstream” (224).
Some of the text’s circular symbols are less obvious. The dreamer waits for a full moon when he is resting in preparation for his second attempt at dreaming a man into being, and he prays to “planetary gods.” The separate paths embarked upon by the dreamer and his son create a circle, with one dreamed being leaving for the other island each time the cycle of creation is perpetuated.
By Jorge Luis Borges
Borges and I
Borges and I
Jorge Luis Borges
Ficciones
Ficciones
Jorge Luis Borges
In Praise of Darkness
In Praise of Darkness
Jorge Luis Borges
Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote
Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote
Jorge Luis Borges
The Aleph
The Aleph
Jorge Luis Borges
The Aleph and Other Stories
The Aleph and Other Stories
Jorge Luis Borges
The Book of Sand
The Book of Sand
Jorge Luis Borges
The Garden of Forking Paths
The Garden of Forking Paths
Jorge Luis Borges
The Library of Babel
The Library of Babel
Jorge Luis Borges