2 resultados para Amadís de Gaula (Spanish romance)

em SAPIENTIA - Universidade do Algarve - Portugal


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

O presente artigo expõe o resultado prático duma análise comparativa, ao nível da intriga, dentro de um amplo e variado corpus hispanoamericano do romance La aúltera. A busca de elementos comuns e distintivos nas 42 versões submetidas a estudo revela a existência de dois tipos do romance. Um corresponde às versões procedentes dos Estados Unidos, México e Nicaragua (tipo 1); o outro engloba os textos recompilados em Cuba, República Dominicana, Porto Rico, Venezuela, Colômbia, Perú, Chile, Argentina e Uruguai (tipo 2). Enquanto o primeiro evoluiu de acordo com o sistema de valores dos seus re-criadores, o segundo manteve-se mais apegado à tradição herdada. Embora ambos os tipos conservem aspectos concomitantes suficientes, especialmente ao nível do significante, de modo a que se possa continuar a falar de um só romance, a presença ou ausência de uma vasta série de motivos comentados cinge-se, com uma precisão surpreendente, aos limites marcados pelos dois tipos.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Isolationism and neutrality are two of the recurrent themes in the study of the history of the U.S. foreign policy in the interwar years. The trauma of the Great War, which had swept away 130.000 U.S. lives and had cost $30 billion, had led public opinion to strongly oppose any involvement with European affairs. Besides, the urgent need for economic recovery during the dismal years of the Great Depression did not leave Roosevelt much room for manoeuvre to influence international events. His positions regarding the intentions of the Fascist states remained, at best, ambivalent. These facts notwithstanding, about 2800 U.S. citizens crossed the Atlantic and rushed in to help democratic Spain, which was on the verge of becoming one more hostage in the hands of the Fascism. They joined the other British, Irish and Canadian volunteers and formed the XV International Brigade. 900 Americans never returned home. This alone should challenge the commonly held assumption that the American people were indifferent to the rise of the Fascist threat in Europe. But it also begs other questions. Considering the prevailing isolationist mood, what really motivated them? With what discursive elements did these men construct their anti Fascist representations? How far did their understanding of the Spanish democracy correspond to their own American democratic ideal? In what way did their war experience across the Atlantic mould their perception of U.S. politics (both domestic and foreign)? How far did the Spanish Civil War constitute one first step towards the realization that the U.S. might actually be drawn into another international conflict of unpredictable consequences? Last but not the least, what ideological, political and cultural complicity existed between the men from the English-speaking battalions? In order to unearth some of the answers, I intend to examine their letters and see how these men recorded the historical events in which they took part. Their correspondence emerged from the desire to prove their commitment to a common cause and spoke of a common war experience, but each letter, in its uniqueness, ends up mirroring not only the social and political background of each individual fighter, but also his own particular perspective of the war, of world politics and of the Spanish people. We shall see how these letters differ and converge and how these particular accounts weave, as in an epistolary novel, a larger-than-life narrative of outrage and solidarity, despair and hope.