3 resultados para Voice analysis
em Línguas
Resumo:
This paper analyses the relation of feminine voice performance in the years of radio age and the way the brazilians singers sings today. The goal is to analyze enunciative traces of a singular subjectivity anchored in the singing voice. The paper focus the moment, since the years of 1980, when the feminine voice no longer sounds like the singers of the gold radio time. In this period, to display a dramatic mark in the voice was the production conditions of the singing woman. In the area of the French school of discourse analysis, this paper is a part of a larger research in progress. We intend to describe the certain mode of feminine subjectivity acting in the voice as an act of enonciation.
Resumo:
Inserted in the perspective of literary studies, this paper proposes an analysis of the “Cartas Portuguesas” (Portuguese Letters), a work attributed to Mariana Alcoforado, assuming that this work is constituted within the Lusitanian literature as an important formative element of the imaginary loving Portuguese female voice. Through the study, it is possible to identify the fact that the letters are prefaced, stylistically or thematically, by the songs of love and of friend, and succeeded by works such as “Livro de Sóror Saudade” (Book of Longing Sóror), of Florbela Espanca, and “Novas Cartas Portuguesas” (New Portuguese Letters) by Maria Isabel Barreno, Maria Velho da Costa and Maria Teresa Horta.
Resumo:
This article aims to analyze the book Bufo & Spallanzani (1985), of the Brazilian writer Ruben Fonseca, in order to observe how it approaches and/or departs from some characteristics attributed to the Detective Novel, particularly in light of Tzvetan Todorov's theory. For that, this reading turns to the study of the multifaceted figure of the narrator, who is, at the same time, writer and murderer. Therefore, it aims to clarify what are the implications, aesthetic and/or otherwise, of the voice given to the killer-writer, as well as what is the role of the detective in the condiction of a secondary character.