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Nove Noites by Bernardo Carvalho
Nove Noites by Bernardo Carvalho









Nove Noites by Bernardo Carvalho

A histria contada em dois tempos, na tribo dos ndios krah (interior do serto brasileiro) e na combinao progressiva entre a busca. He shared the Portugal Telecom Prize for Literature with Dalton Trevisan for his novel Nove Noites. Nove noites narra a descida ao corao das trevas empreendida pelo jovem expoente da antropologia americana, colega de Lvi-Strauss e aluno dileto de Ruth Benedict, s vsperas da Segunda Guerra. His novel Mongólia received the 2003 prize of the Associação Paulista dos Críticos de Arte.

Nove Noites by Bernardo Carvalho

His first two novels were edited in France. He was the editor of “ Folhetim,” a collection of essays, and is a Paris and New York correspondent for Folha de S.Paulo. Prisca Agustoni de Almeida Pereira O romance Nove noites nasce em razo de uma fascinao que o escritor Bernardo Carvalho parece ter experimentado ao tomar conhecimento da histria do antroplogo americano Buell Quain, e isso principalmente em funo do mistrio que envolve o seu suicdio no meio da selva. Finally, in Silviano Santiago's "Stella Manhattan" (1985) and "Viagem ao México" (1995) travel becomes a mechanism that reveals modes of resistance, assimilation, and transformation of the Other, while engaging in a postcolonial debate, within the Latin American context, regarding Western Modernity in the time of global capitalism.Bernardo Carvalho (born 1960 in Rio de Janeiro) is a Brazilian author and journalist. In Bernardo Carvalho's "Nove Noites" (2002) and "Mongólia" (2003), travel functions as a way to contest the truth-value of the essentialized mode of representation of the other carried out by ethnographic discourses, such as travel guides. In João Gilberto Noll's "Berkeley in Bellagio" (2002) and "Lorde" (2004), the metaphor of travel functions as the representation of a traveler moving toward an understanding of his own self. The dissertation is structured around three movements that correspond to the aesthetic projects of these authors. The work of these Brazilian writers problematizes the dichotomies of self-other, north-south, real-fictional, while attempting to rescue the Modernist consideration of the place of language and discourse as a privileged site to analyze matters related to identity-formation. This questioning is transfigured throughout the metaphor of travel, reflecting a movement that happens in global space, but also in the language that constitutes identities. The present dissertation, in the field of contemporary Brazilian Literature, analyzes how three Brazilian writers, João Gilberto Noll (1946-), Bernardo Carvalho (1960-) and Silviano Santiago (1936-), question essentialized and authoritarian positions of national identity through the development of characters traveling to the space of the Other.











Nove Noites by Bernardo Carvalho