BDSL-Klassifikation: 03.00.00 Literaturwissenschaft > 03.06.00 Literaturtheorie
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Alessandra Belletti Figueira: Narrativas a luz da história: a estetização da adolescência em contexto de guerra ; Ana Paula Cantarelli: O confronto entre cidade interiorana e metrópole na obra de Caio Fernando Abreu ; Antonio Barros de Brito Júnior: Política da interpretação do texto literário: alguma ética é possível? ; Antônio Carlos Silveira Xerxenesky: Inevitabilidade e Apocalipse: o Fracasso do Humanismo em 2666, de Roberto Bolaño ; Carina Marques: Do criador de civilização ao eu-abismo: uma leitura palimpsestuosa do Fausto de Fernando Pessoa ; Cristiano Mello de Oliveira: A linguagem da resistência na obra “Cidade de Deus” de Paulo Lins ; Daisy da Silva César: Relação entre artes, media e formas expressivas: a personagem Fantomas em seus diversos contextos ; Denise Silva: Homogeneização cultural x Soberania nacional: uma discussão sobre a possibilidade do apagamento das culturas locais ; Dogomar González Baldi: Bartolomé de Las Casas, “O paraíso destruído; Gonzalo Guerrero, O Renegado; e “Avatar”, o filme para além de civilização e barbárie: a questão do outro não humano, uma leitura antropo-ética interdisciplinar ; Elisa de Avila Hönnicke: Trauma e tempo nas manifestações do onze de setembro - conflito entre as necessidades de lembrar e esquecer ; Fabrícia Silva Dantas e Luciano Barbosa Justino: Poesia, corpo e cinema em Terra em transe de Glauber Rocha ; Felipe Grüne Ewald: A consciência participante: perspectivismo e tradução cultural ; Fernanda Borges: Los premios: identidade e cultura sob um viés existencialista ; Francesca Batista de Azevedo: Diálogos entre Bernard Lahire e Clarice Lispector: Sociologia psicológica e um cego mascando chicles ; Gabriela Semensato Ferreira: Ser ou não ser: a questão do “eu” na ficção ; Gerson Neumann: Uma literatura sem lugar definido ; Giórgio Zimann Gislon: Aguardar, e, ou, caminhar ; Gisélle Razera: Simão Bacamarte e Policarpo Quaresma: Ciência, Nacionalismo e Hegemonia Europeia ; Ilva Maria Boniatti: O local revisitado em Luís Antônio de Assis Brasil ; José Teixeira Félix: Da oralidade ao escrito ou de como narrativas produzidas por indígenas brasileiros estão saindo das margens para o centro das discussões acadêmicas em cursos de Letras, no Brasil ; Larissa Daiane Pujol Corsino dos Santos: A confiança da imaginação popular nos media: o espaço textual nas telenovelas ; Melissa Rubio dos Santos: A mobilidade memorial ou intersubjetiva em Le goût des jeunes filles de Dany Laferrière ; Michele Savaris e Anelise Ferreira Riva: As versões hispanoamericanas da Bela Adormecida: gênero, memória e intertextualidade ; Rafael Eisinger Guimarães: Entre el campo y la estancia: lar, família e identidade gauchesca nas obras de José Hernández, Jorge Luis Borges e Silvina Ocampo ; Simone Xavier Moreira: Biografia, autobiografia e reminiscências: as construções discursivas de Caio Fernando Abreu ; Vinícius Gonçalves Carneiro: Cartas de Caio Fernando Abreu e Paulo Leminski: a história de um esquecimento e o fetiche da marginalização ; Vivian Nickel: Descolonizando traumas, narrando memórias: os estudos pós-coloniais do trauma e a literatura
Estes anais reúnem os trabalhos que, após apresentação no Seminário Nacional Vanguardas, Surrealismo e Modernidade: Europa e Américas, foram entregues, no prazo estabelecido, por seus autores à Comissão Organizadora do Congresso; foram todos submetidos a processo de avaliação por pareceristas, desenvolvido pela Comissão Científica de Publicação dos Anais, com a colaboração de pareceristas ad hoc externos à Comissão e à UFRGS, sob a coordenação de Robert Ponge, Ruben Daniel Méndez Castiglioni, Janaína de Azevedo Baladão e Nara H. N. Machado. – Os coordenadores do evento agradecem: aos professores Michael Korfmann e Gerson R. Neumann, editores da Contingentia, por acolher a publicação dos anais nas páginas de sua revista; à acadêmica Gabriela W. Linck, monitora da revista, pelas tarefas decorrentes da inserção dos anais na Contingentia.
Thiago Benites dos Santos: Inovação técnica e os media óticos em Kafka. ; Vítor Jochims Schneider: O olhar fotográfico e textual em Prosa do Observatório de Julio Cortázar. ; Márcia Lappe Alves: The question of point of view. ; Ana Lúcia Silva Paranhos: Le Désert Mauve de Nicole Brossard: Un Parcours dans l’univers de la traduccion littéraire. ; Daniel Iturvides Dutra: A literatura de ficção – científica e os problemas de tradução para a mídia fílmica. ; Larissa Rohde: Notes on Narayan’s Prose. ; Claudio Vescia Zanin: Abjection and Evil in ‘Haunted’. ; Fernanda Fernandes / Robert Ponge: Um breve estudo da intriga e de dois personagens de Roberto Zucco, peça de Bernard-Marie Koltès. ; Jaqueline Bohn Donada: ‘Romola’, by George Eliot, and its Conflicts. ; Maria Izabel V. Domingues: Literatura Escocesa e Literatura Brasileira: nacionalismo, regionalismo e algumas sutilezas. ; Vanessa Costa e Silva Schmitt/Robert Ponge: A medicina em ‘A Obra Em Negro’ de Marguerite Yourcenar: as diversas profissões da arte de curar no século XVI. ; Kelley B. Duarte: A escrita autoficcional e os percursos de memória em Régine Robin. ; Ivonne Mogendorff: ‘Andamios’ de Mario Benedetti – Memoria en las huellas del desexilio. ; Carlos Eduardo Meneghetti Scholles: Storytelling Coyotes: the Coyote Trickster Figure in Thomas King. ; Valter Henrique Fritsch: Apropriação do Discurso Mítico: Cassandra Profetisa a Pós-Modernidade. ; Érika Azevedo/Robert Ponge: André Breton e os primórdios do surrealismo. ; Monica Stefani: ‘You are what you read’: intertextual relations between Patrick White’s ‘The Solid Mandala’ and F. Dostoyevsky’s ‘The Brothers Karamazov’. ; Adriane Veras: A Reading of Sandra Cisneros’s ‘The House on Mango Street’. ; Lisanea Weber: Uma leitura sobre a escravidão no romance epistolar de Ina von Binzer.
Wie Enzensberger […] verdeutlicht, eröffnen literarische Texte […] einen Raum, in dem unterschiedliche und kontroverse wissenschaftliche Theorien […] miteinander kollidieren, wodurch ihre Bedingtheit und Relativität erkennbar wird. Die modernistische […] Vorstellung, Literatur sei subversiv, stelle in Frage, was immer sich als absolute Wahrheit ausgebe, relativiere die Ordnungen des Wissens und insbesondere alle sich verbindlich gebenden Theorien über den Menschen und die natürliche Welt, hat an Aktualität nicht verloren. […] Philosophen und Literaturtheoretiker verschiedenster Denkrichtungen kommen […] darin überein, daß Literatur subversiv ist: Gegen falsche Sicherheiten und gegen die Illusion absoluter Wahrheit gerichtet, deutet sie auf die Vieldeutigkeit aller Dinge und die Vielzahl inkompatibler Betrachtungsperspektiven hin, indem sie selbst vieldeutige und multiple Welten erzeugt. In dieser Eigenschaft ist das literarische Schreiben durch keinen anderen Diskurs ersetzbar. Die ihr hier zugeschriebene subversive Rolle als Instanz kritischer Reflexion über Begriffe, Theoriebildungen und Wissenschaft kann die Literatur allerdings nur dann spielen, wenn sie in engem und dauerhaften Kontakt zu den Wissenschaften bleibt. Die Kritik an Wissensdiskursen setzt einen ständig zu aktualisierenden .Informationsstand voraus: über die jeweils dominanten wissenschaftlichen Paradigmen, Kernbegriffe und Moden, die Strategien wissenschaftlicher Konstruktion und Darstellung dessen, was ist.
[D]ieser Veranstaltungstyp [wurde] 1996 etabliert […] und die komparatistisch angelegte Konferenz der Abteilung 2012 [wird] nunmehr zum 17. Mal in Folge ausgerichtet […]. Über den Kreis der 15 Referenten hinaus war sie mit etwa 120 aktiv mitdiskutierenden Teilnehmern gut besucht. Thematisch orientiert sich die Konferenz jeweils an einem Semesterkurs, den die Studierenden der am Department angebotenen Master‐Studiengänge (Deutsch, Französisch, Spanisch, Italienisch) durchlaufen.
Bakhtin and Dostoevsky shared the conviction that human life must be understood in terms of temporality. Both thinkers were obsessed with time’s relation to life as people experience it. For each, a rich sense of humanity demanded a chronotope of open time. In many respects, the views of Bakhtin and Dostoevsky coincide. Theologically speaking, one could fairly call them both heretics, as we shall see. Their differences reflect their different starting points. Bakhtin began with ethics, whereas Dostoevsky thought about life first and foremost in terms of psychology. For Bakhtin, any viable view of the world had first of all to give a rich meaning to moral responsibility. Dostoevsky could accept no view that was false to his sense of how the human mind thought and felt.
The Fugue of Chronotope
(2010)
As the survey by Nele Bemong and Pieter Borghart introducing this volume makes clear, the term chronotope has devolved into a veritable carnival of orismology. For all the good work that has been done by an ever-growing number of intelligent critics, chronotope remains a Gordian knot of ambiguities with no Alexander in sight. The term has metastasized across the whole spectrum of the human and social sciences since the publication of FTC in Russian in 1975, and (especially) after its translation into English in 1981. As others have pointed out, one of the more striking features of the chronotope is the plethora of meanings that have been read into the term: that its popularity is a function of its opacity has become a cliché. In the current state of chronotopic heteroglossia, then, how are we to proceed? The argument of this essay is that many of the difficulties faced by Bakhtin’s critics derive from ambiguities with which Bakhtin never ceased to struggle. That is, instead of advancing yet another definition of my own, I will investigate some of the attempts made by Bakhtin himself to give the term greater precision throughout his long life. In so doing, I will also hope to cast some light on the foundational role of time-space in Bakhtin’s philosophy of dialog as it, too, took on different meanings at various points in his thinking.
In this contribution we try to probe the generic chronotope of realism, which, judging from its astonishing productivity in the nineteenth century and the profound impact it has had on literary evolution and theory ever since, can be designated nothing less than a hallmark in the general history of narrative. Although we are primarily concerned with the description of the principles of construction underlying the realistic, “documentary”, chronotope, we would also like to touch upon some of its rather evident, but still somewhat under-discussed similarities with the genre of historiography. For, despite an abundance of what could be called “touches of realism” in a plethora of literary texts and genres (both narrative and poetic) since the very beginnings of literary history itself, the direct germs of realism as it developed into a particular narrative genre or generic chronotope during the nineteenth century may well be situated in “prescientific” historiographical works such as those of Gibbon or Michelet.
The aim of this introductory article [to the volume of the same title], firstly, is to recapitulate the basic principles of Bakhtin’s initial theory as formulated in “Forms of Time and of the Chronotope in the Novel: Notes toward a Historical Poetics” (henceforth FTC) and “The Bildungsroman and its Significance in the History of Realism (Toward a Historic Typology of the Novel)” (henceforth BSHR). Subsequently, we present some relevant elaborations of Bakhtin’s initial concept and a number of applications of chronotopic analysis, closing our state of the art by outlining two perspectives for further investigation. Some of the issues which we touch upon receive more detailed treatment in other contributions to this volume. Others may offer perspectives for future Bakhtin scholarship.
This paper forms part of a larger, ongoing project, to investigate how certain narrative possibilities that seem to have crystallized for the first time in the ancient Greek novel have proved persistent and productive over time, undergoing subtle transformations during formative later periods in the history of the genre, notably the twelfth century (simultaneously in Old French and in Byzantine Greek) and the eighteenth (the time when, according to a narrower definition, the novel is said to originate). For the present, my more limited aim is to revisit the two main essays in which Bakhtin’s theory of the chronotope (and of the “historical poetics” of the novel) are developed, and to extrapolate what seem to me to the most significant and productive lines of his approach, both in general, and with specific reference to the ancient Greek novel. I will then attempt simultaneously to apply and to modify Bakhtin’s model, in the light of a reading of Achilles Tatius’ Leucippe and Clitophon and with reference to previous critiques. The final part of the paper examines how this approach can be productive for a reading of a much later text, often regarded as “foundational” for the modern development of the genre, especially in English, Fielding’s Tom Jones (1749).