Visions of death in the indigenous novels in Darcy Ribeiro and Jorge Icaza

Authors

  • Paulo Sérgio Marques UNESP

Keywords:

Brazilian Literature, Hispanic-American Literature, indigenous, myth and narrative

Abstract

One objective of this comparative study between two scenes of death in the indigenous novels Maí­ra, by Brazilian Darcy Ribeiro, and Huasipungo, by Ecuadorian Jorge Icaza, is to disclose differing notions of death: the white European culture’s and the American native’s. Another objective is to show the way they expresses a peculiar weltans­chuung to each culture: the Christian and pagan, and the settlers and settled. The settlers’ views about death in Icaza’s Huasipungo perform as objects of separation and hierarchy, while the nati­ves’ views in Ribeiro’s Maíra appear as processes of communion and participation. Comparisons between each conception make use of anthropo­logical and archetypal criticism methodologies from the theories of Humberto Maturana, Gilbert Durand, and Joseph Campbell, among others.

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Author Biography

Paulo Sérgio Marques, UNESP

Mestre e Doutorando em Estudos Literários pela Faculdade de Ciências e Letras de Araraquara, Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp). Publicou, dentre outros, o artigo “Poesia Feminina em Mato Grosso: Filiações e Rup­turas na Poesia de Arlinda Morbeck e Amália Verlangieri” (Abralic, 2006), o livro de poesias Primeiro e a obra crítica Dez modernistas, este último em co-autoria com Paulo Sesar Pimentel.

Published

2007-06-30

How to Cite

Marques, P. S. (2007). Visions of death in the indigenous novels in Darcy Ribeiro and Jorge Icaza. Gragoatá, 12(22). Retrieved from https://periodicos.uff.br/gragoata/article/view/33198