
De Evita a Eva Lopo, do romance de Lídia Jorge ao cinema de Margarida Cardoso: a transposição de uma personagem instransponível
Author(s) -
Camila Canali Doval
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
anuário de literatura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2175-7917
pISSN - 1414-5235
DOI - 10.5007/2175-7917.2013v18n2p69
Subject(s) - plot (graphics) , movie theater , romance , portuguese , humanities , art , art history , history , literature , philosophy , mathematics , linguistics , statistics
This article had its main argument brought up by Lídia Jorge’s speech during the lecture given on September 28, 2012 at 7:30p.m. in the auditorium of building 9 at Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS). The author spoke to the audience about the film adaptation for her novel The Murmuring Coast (1988 ), executed by the director, also Portuguese, Margarida Cardoso (in 2004 ). When she was asked about the female perspective on the colonial war – one in many of the thematic perspectives that can be picked from the work - Lídia confronted the two works, arguing that the book does not advocate/endorse one innocent look from the women at the war, while in the film plot, a prospect of deliverance from guilt is presented. Given this starting point, this analysis aims to examine how the director, Margarida Cardoso, interpreted and adapt the women acting, portrayed in the original work, considering the main conflict of the plot, focusing on the protagonist Eva Lopo, Evita