Tesis
Diáspora, fronteiras e pós-colonialismo em os dois irmãos, de Germano Almeida
Fecha
2018-06-26Registro en:
CRUZ, Diego da. Diáspora, fronteiras e pós-colonialismo em os dois irmãos, de Germano Almeida. 2018. 97 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Estudos de Linguagem) - Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Instituto de Linguagens, Cuiabá, 2018.
Autor
Souza, Marinete Luzia Francisca de
http://lattes.cnpq.br/8464886562386260
Souza, Marinete Luzia Francisca de
894.879.821-91
http://lattes.cnpq.br/8464886562386260
Carbonieri, Divanize
178.171.138-07
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0788015091466520
894.879.821-91
Mantovani, Antonio Aparecido
513.007.969-87
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0263606740522344
Institución
Resumen
This work aims to analyze the work of Cape Verdean Germano
Almeida The Two Brothers (1995) through the concepts of coloniality,
colonization and culture. After analyzing the work, we will find that it establishes
connection with Latin American works, especially Chronicle of a Death Foretold,
by Gabriel Garcia Márquez, we will realize that there is a search for autonomy
both in relation to writing and in the sociocultural sense of Cape Verde. In this
work of Germano Almeida "[...] reality is confused with fiction". In this way, the
plot could be a popular jury with or without evidence of a fratricide, but neither
the narrator of the novel and reader is certain of the crime practiced by André.
However, in this novel by Germano Almeida there are traces of that colony
abandoned by Portugal, and damaged by economic decline, and highlights the
Cape Verde diaspora, which makes Cape Verde a country with more inhabitants
than inside the archipelago. Thus, will be briefly read with Willians (2007) and
Mudimbe (2013) some transformations of the word culture and its implication
the colonization of Africa. Soon after, with Said (2011) and Grosfoguel (2013),
we will discuss the concept of "coloniality of power" and the search of the
disciplines of cultural studies to collaborate in the search for new
epistemologies. With Foucault (2001), we will highlight the implications of two
characters (André who practices the crime of fratricide against his brother John)
and the judge/narrator with the concept of "author function" in the process of
"decolonization of power."