910 resultados para Bret Easton Ellis


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In 1968, Herbert Marcuse believed that a Great Refusal was possible, one that would deny the exploitative power of corporate capitalism. Marcuse's vision was never realised. This essay argues that society today is in an advanced state of that which the Frankfurt School termed repressive desublimation and questions whether a liberationary praxis is still possible. It claims that Bret Easton Ellis's fiction choreographs an internalising of the forms of critique that marked 1968 and about which Marcuse writes. It is Ellis's act of double voicing that allows him to develop a duplicitous recalcitrant voice within the state of assimilation and it is double voicing which emerges as the key technique in Ellis's work that effects an ongoing critique in commodity society. Looking at Slavoj iek's recent revisionism of the notion of repressive desublimation, which connects Marxism and psychoanalysis, the essay considers how Ellis's novels, American Psycho, Glamorama and Lunar Park, function to address and reconfigure the relationship between the status of the Marxist fetishised object and the psychoanalytic phobic object in the present-day era of late capitalism. This essay seeks to illuminate how Ellis's fiction, through an involution of Marcuse's political theories, enacts a contemporary refusal from within the state of reification.

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Patrick Bateman, o protagonista narrador do romance American Psycho (1991), de Bret Easton Ellis, confunde por ser rico, bonito e educado e, ao mesmo tempo, torturador, assassino e canibal. Mas esta personalidade antagônica não o torna singular. O que o particulariza são as quatro faces que ele apresenta ao longo de sua narrativa: (1) ele consome mercadorias e humanos, (2) compete para ter reconhecimento, (3) provoca horror por suas ações, e (4) não é um narrador confiável. Sendo um yuppie (termo popular usado nos Estados Unidos na década de 1980 para denominar jovens e bem sucedidos profissionais urbanos), Bateman é materialista e hedonista. Ele está imerso em uma sociedade de consumo, fato que o impossibilita de perceber diferenças entre produtos e pessoas. Sendo um narcisista, ele se torna um competidor em busca de admiração. No entanto, Bateman também é um serial killer e suas descrições detalhadas de torturas e assassinatos horrorizam. Por fim, nós leitores duvidamos de sua narrativa ao notarmos inconsistências e ambiguidades. Zygmunt Bauman (2009) afirma que uma sociedade extremamente capitalista transforma tudo que nela existe em algo consumível. Christopher Lasch (1991) afirma que o lendário Narciso deu lugar a um novo, controverso, dependente e menos confiante. A maioria das vítimas de Bateman são membros de grupos socialmente marginalizados, como mendigos, homossexuais, imigrantes e prostitutas, o que o torna uma identidade predatória, segundo Arjun Appadurai (2006). A voz autodiegética e a narrativa incongruente do protagonista, contudo, impedem que confiemos em suas palavras. Estas são as quatro faces que pretendo apresentar deste serial killer

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Serial killers are among the most popular and enduring character types in contemporary culture. In this exegesis I investigate one of the reasons for this popularity by examining the representational relationships between serial killers and serial consumers. I initially establish that all monsters, whether they are vampires, werewolves or serial killers, emerge from cultural anxieties and signify the anxiety which gave them birth. I go on to identify that the cultural anxiety at play with serial killers is consumerism and in doing so, I identify two key parallels between the serial killer and the consumer, namely a sense of lack and a desire for transformation. I then examine the ways in which the serial killer is representative of the consumer in three exemplar texts, The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris, American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis and Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay. I go on to self-reflexively examine the creation of my novel Carnivore, the accompanying draft of which has been influenced by both the exemplar texts and the findings of the exegesis.

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Le concept des Sociétés de fictions élaboré dans le cadre de ce mémoire vise l’exploration de la médiation à l’ère du numérique. Pour penser les modalités de fictions littéraires avec l’idée qu’elles puissent former des sociétés distinctes, ce travail d’analyse propose d’examiner diverses fictions, plus précisément des expressions gothiques américaines en littérature contemporaine, afin d’en extraire un mode de pensée significatif. Dans le dessein d’analyser la manière dont ces fictions se relient entre elles, cette recherche se focalise sur le rapport qu’entretient la fiction littéraire avec la technologie ainsi qu’avec divers modes de diffusion et de médiation. Afin de comprendre comment les mécanismes du discours positionnent des œuvres de fictions les unes par rapport aux autres, ces fictions individuées seront d’abord examinées au sein d’une société qui leur est propre. Ceci mènera à exposer en quoi et comment les rapports qu’entretient l’humain avec la littérature et la technologie se reconfigurent par le biais de nouvelles formes de médiations. La présente réflexion se penche ainsi sur les modes d’interactions des fictions qui s’organisent en sociétés afin de pouvoir analyser comment le glissement du paradigme de l’imprimé et des supports matériels, à l’âge du numérique, peut se traduire par une manière inédite de penser notre relation au littéraire. En somme, cette réflexion sur la mobilité des formes et des plateformes liées aux fictions et à leur société devrait permettre de mieux analyser les individus qui inventent et consomment ces fictions, leur univers social ainsi que leur rapport intime à la technologie et ses médiations. Ces sociétés de fictions deviennent alors une clé pour comprendre notre rapport à la virtualisation de nos univers sociaux. Entre les sociétés de fictions et les sociétés des Hommes se noue un lien substantiel laissant entrevoir une véritable co-évolution de ces univers distincts. Les principales œuvres de fiction étudiées et citées seront celles du romancier et scénariste américain Bret Easton Ellis, plus précisément les romans Less Than Zero et Imperial Bedrooms. Il sera également question de la série télévisuelle Twin Peaks, diffusée sur la chaîne ABC en 1990 et réalisée par David Lynch, ainsi que d’une nouvelle de John Cheever, The enormous radio, parue en 1947, dans le New Yorker.

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Table of Contents “your darkness also/rich and beyond fear”: Community Performance, Somatic Poetics and the Vessels of Self and Other - Petra Kuppers. "So what will you do on the plinth?”: A Personal Experience of Disclosure during Antony Gormley’s "One & Other" Project - Jill Francesca Dowse. Food Confessions: Disclosing the Self through the Performance of Food - Jenny Lawson Participation Cartography: The Presentation of Self in Spatio-Temporal Terms - Luis Carlos Sotelo-Castro Disclosure in Biographically-Based Fiction: The Challenges of Writing Narratives Based on True Life Stories - Donna Lee Brien. Closure through Mock-Disclosure in Bret Easton Ellis’s Lunar Park - Jennifer Anne Phillips. Disclosing the Ethnographic Self - Christine Lohmeier Celebrity Twitter: Strategies of Intrusion and Disclosure in the Age of Technoculture - Nick Muntean, Anne Helen Petersen. “Just Emotional People”? Emo Culture and the Anxieties of Disclosure - Michelle Phillipov.

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This review examines five books in the Oxford Business English Express Series, including "English for telecoms and information technology" by T. Ricca and M. Duckworth; "English for legal professionals" by A. Frost; "English for the pharmaceutical industry" by M. Buchler, K. Jaehnig, G. Matzig, and T. Weindler; "English for cabin crews" by S. Ellis and L. Lansford; and "English for negotiating" by C. Lafond, S. Vine, and B. Welch.

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