Reflexões sobre a condição do artista contemporâneo na luta contra os discursos oficiais: Paul Auster, a literatura e a história
Author(s) -
Lílian Reichert Coelho
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
revista internacional interdisciplinar interthesis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1807-1384
DOI - 10.5007/1807-1384.2010v7n2p210
Subject(s) - trilogy , criticism , relation (database) , mythology , identity (music) , articulation (sociology) , masculinity , national identity , art , humanities , sociology , literature , gender studies , politics , political science , law , aesthetics , database , computer science
We present a reading of The New York Trilogy (1987), Leviathan (1992) and The Brooklyn Follies (2005), by Paul Auster, through the articulation between subjectivities and discourses, notably literature and history. The effort was guided by the observation of the criticism constructed by the writer in relation to the United States' national myth, in the perspective of a movement that resounds other writers' criticism, overall the north-American ones, among which Auster presents himself as a genealogical heir. In digging the discursive and historical viscera on the "origin" of the American nation, the writer presents some reflections on the national identity issue, mainly in relation to the symbols and to the way the characters deal with the official representations
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