dc.contributorFerrada Aguilar, Héctor
dc.contributorFacultad de Filosofía y Humanidades
dc.contributorDepartamento de Lingüística
dc.creatorGamonal Villarroel, Mónica
dc.date.accessioned2012-09-28T14:57:26Z
dc.date.available2012-09-28T14:57:26Z
dc.date.created2012-09-28T14:57:26Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/110897
dc.description.abstract"Factotum‟, published in 1975, tells the daily life of Henry Chinaski, writer's own transcript, a writer who lives with resignation and weariness after being saved from going to war, and accepts all kinds of rubbish jobs to survive, and to clear his conscience while focused on pursuing what really fulfils him: writing. His self-destructive behavior seems to respond viscerally to a sort of instinctive urge in a universe declining and lacking self-pity. Chinaski is too conscious of his curse, he is destined to live a difficult existence in which he finds people predictable or he simply "do not like" them. For the purpose of the analysis of his writing style, „Factotum‟ and several poems from the anthology „The Pleasures of the Damned‟ will be necessary. It has been said that Bukowski with his terse, brusque and forceful prose, is the atrocious novelist of the great urban jungle: the destitute, prostitutes, drunks, in other words, he is the novelist of the human waste of the American Dream.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherUniversidad de Chile
dc.subjectBukowski, Charles, 1920-1994
dc.subjectNovela estadounidense--Siglo 20--Historia y crítica
dc.titleThe alienated subject and the capitalist machine : the case of Henry Chinaski
dc.typeTesis


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