1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910629587503321

Autore

Yurgel Caio

Titolo

Landscape's Revenge : the ecology of failure in Robert Walser and Bernardo Carvalho / / Caio Yurgel

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin : , : De Gruyter, , 2018

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (264 pages)

Collana

Latin American Literatures in the World

Disciplina

111.85

Soggetti

Landscapes

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter --Acknowledgement --Contents --1. Introduction --2. Literature review: Landscape's revenge --3. From the unreal to the apocalypse: The landscape as a function of language and narrative in Walser and Carvalho --4. The disappearing act: Moving towards the margins --5. How to do things with fire: The desert as landscape's final revenge and as the culmination of Walser's and Carvalho's literary projects --6. The desert for conclusion --References.

Sommario/riassunto

Landscape, as it appears and is described throughout the works of Bernardo Carvalho and Robert Walser, provides an excellent-yet virtually unexplored-pathway to the authors' literary projects. The landscape functions here as a synthetic and unifying figure that triggers, at first, through the analysis of its description per se, the main and most evident elements of the authors' works. However, when sustained as a methodological figure beyond the scope of its own description, the landscape soon reveals a darker, far more fascinating and far less explored side of the authors' oeuvres: a vengeful, seemingly defeatist resentment against the status quo, which gives way to the more latent and biting elements of the authors' prose, such as irony, the unheimlich, an anti-heroic agenda, the apocalyptic aesthetics of a disaster-prone fictional world, as well as an understanding of history and literature through the figures of failure and marginality. By drawing from diverse critical traditions from Latin-America and Europe, this comparative text seeks to unravel, in all of its complexity and scope, the fictional stage upon which Walser's and Carvalho's



characters narrate, with their dying breath, a world that is slowly undoing itself.