Tesis
Dignidade, nação e tradição : uma leitura através da fisionomia intelectual do personagem em The Remains of the Day de Kazuo Ishiguro
Fecha
2016-10-24Registro en:
MOREIRA, Ângela Tavares Nates. Dignidade, nação e tradição: uma leitura através da fisionomia intelectual do personagem em The Remains of the Day de Kazuo Ishiguro. 2016. 118 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Estudos de Linguagem) - Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Instituto de Linguagens, Cuiabá, 2016.
Autor
Lee, Henrique de Oliveira
http://lattes.cnpq.br/1474605413692910
Lee, Henrique de Oliveira
043.690.536-17
http://lattes.cnpq.br/1474605413692910
Carbonieri, Divanize
178.171.138-07
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0788015091466520
043.690.536-17
Vieira, Erika Viviane Costa
036.194.996-08
http://lattes.cnpq.br/3013583440099933
Institución
Resumen
This thesis investigates the work of the Japanese-British author Kazuo Ishiguro, The
Remains of The Day, originally published in 1989. It has title translated into Portuguese
as Waste the Day and Remains of the Day (Brazil) and Remains of the Day (Portugal).
This study proposes an investigation into how figures of the nation and the English
tradition are expressed in the narrative by what the theorist Georgy Luckács called
intellectual physiognomy of the character-protagonist. This thesis are covered
throughout this work the contributions of interpretative hypothesis of intellectual
physiognomy from the figure an unreliable narrator, as pointed out by Zuzana
Foniokova (2006). In addition, during the Stevens Butler trajectory significance of space
"Darlington Hall" composes with the protagonist a series of speeches that were
assessed as rhetorical elements that functioned as a metaphor of tradition and national
identity. To better understand the novel by Ishiguro within a broader strategy of criticism
of the English tradition in literature in the second chapter we have made a comparison
with the short story The Canterville Ghost Irish writer Oscar Wilde. The purpose of this
comparison was to investigate the construction of the discourse of the English nation
tradition in their narratives that establish the representation of the English country
mansion Darlington Hall the work of Ishiguro, and Canterville Chase, the Wilde tale.