Dissertação
Fragmentação identitária no romance “O caso Morel”, de Rubem Fonseca
Fecha
2022-07-20Autor
Angst, Carine Maria
Institución
Resumen
This thesis aims to analyze identity elements in the novel O caso Morel (1995), written by
Rubem Fonseca. For this, at first, some important characteristics of the historical context in
which the novel was written were traced, in addition to carrying out a reflection on the social
configuration at the world level and in Brazil in that period. This discussion aimed to
intertwine the context of production at the time with the fragmentation of the novel and to
identify possible dialogues with the period in which the text was produced. In a second
moment, some considerations were made about postmodernism, a context in which the novel
was produced and received by the public and critics. Thus, the theories of Jameson (1997),
Lyotard (2009), Hutcheon (1991), Rouanet (1987), Bauman (2005) and Hall (2006) were
chosen because it is considered that their research on postmodernity and identity converge
with the fragmentary structure of the novel under study. In a third moment, the fragmentary
composition of the narrators was analyzed through the narrative levels that are interspersed in
the text, followed by the analysis of the social and intimate ties established, mainly, by the
narrator-character of the novel. Then, it was explored how space and time are used in the
narrative by the protagonists to establish links with their identity projects. Finally, it was
observed how the form and structure of the novel dialogue and reinforce the fragmentation of
the narrative voice, social ties, space and time through ruptures, lack of linearity, citations and
generic hybridism of the narrative construction. Finally, the research portrays that the
characters Morel, in the narrative foreground, and Vilela, in the narrative background,
represent the provisionality and identity fragmentation of the postmodern man. The results
show that the novel O caso Morel, by Rubem Fonseca deconstructs, reconstructs and then
breaks with the very structure of the text, exposing that postmodern fiction aims to
problematize the reference, which results in the weakening of meanings, in the fragmentation
of poetics and in identity fragmentation.