Visions of death in the indigenous novels in Darcy Ribeiro and Jorge Icaza
Keywords:
Brazilian Literature, Hispanic-American Literature, indigenous, myth and narrativeAbstract
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.Downloads
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