Corpos do fantástico: o duplo em “William Wilson”, de Poe, “O espelho”, de Machado de Assis e O médico e o monstro, de Stevenson

This dissertation investigates the phenomenon of the double in the works: “William Wilson” by Edgar Allan Poe (1839/2012); “The mirror” by Machado de Assis (1882/2019), and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson (1886/1995). Among the objectives of the research, we hig...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor: Caputo, Elieni Cristina da Silva Amorelli
Formato: tesis de maestría
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:Brasil
Recursos:Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP)
Repositorio:Repositório Institucional da PUC_SP
Idioma:portugués
OAI Identifier:oai:repositorio.pucsp.br:handle/24386
Acesso em linha:https://repositorio.pucsp.br/jspui/handle/handle/24386
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:CNPQ::LINGUISTICA, LETRAS E ARTES::LETRAS::TEORIA LITERARIA
Edgar Allan Poe
Machado de Assis
Robert Louis Stevenson
Descrição
Resumo:This dissertation investigates the phenomenon of the double in the works: “William Wilson” by Edgar Allan Poe (1839/2012); “The mirror” by Machado de Assis (1882/2019), and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson (1886/1995). Among the objectives of the research, we highlight: to create connections between the historical context of the authors and the formal and thematic configuration of the double in the corresponding texts; apprehending the imagetic, language, and body’s mechanisms in the formation of the double; connecting the corpus to the procedures and themes of the fantastic. The work discusses the dynamic of mirroring between the individual and his double as an identical image, in disintegration or opposite to the original, as we see respectively in the texts of Poe, Machado, and Stevenson. We have as a base hypothesis that Joãozinho/Jacobina, Jekyll/Hyde, and the double William Wilson require the configuration of borderline bodies, the literary material made of thresholds and borders. Other hypotheses are: these bodies require an atavistic presence, still undifferentiated and unconscious of the otherness; the construction of the characters evokes events from the XIX century; all the characters materialize fissures in the reason, recurring motto in the fantastic literature. The motif of the double appears in oral cultures and millennial narratives, which allow us questioning the unity of the self, disseminated by Western rationality. In the literature, the production about the theme is vast, particularly in the fantastic texts, which bring experiences of cleaving and splitting into antagonistic, mimetic parts. As a theoretical contribution, we highlight studies about the double by Otto Rank (2013) and Clément Rosset (1988); psychoanalytic and philosophical studies about the unconscious, the language, the perception, and the imagination by Sigmund Freud (2010), Jacques Lacan (1988), Mikhail Bakhtin (2003), and Giorgio Agamben (2007); fantastic theories by Tzvetan Todorov (1992), Remo Ceserani (2006), and Irène Bessière (2012). This research is qualitative, based on a kind of reasoning which passes through the tensions of unity vs. fragmentation, narcissism vs. otherness, imagination vs. language. The analysis revealed a regression to the primeval states of the psychological development in the mechanism of the double. We nominated the torn apart, amorphous images, or incomplete individuals, of “limbic bodies”, an expression that evokes the border and spectral literary framing. All those narratives bring, to some degree, themes and procedures from the fantastic, when they promote the tension between reason and unreason, besides taboo themes as crime, suicide, nihilism, madness