Maestría en Hermenéutica Literaria (tesis)
URI permanente para esta colección
Examinar
Examinando Maestría en Hermenéutica Literaria (tesis) por Tipo de documento "Artículo"
Mostrando 1 - 2 de 2
Resultados por página
Opciones de ordenación
Publicación Interpretación de dos poemas del libro "Danzantes del viento" de Hugo Jamioy(Universidad EAFIT, 2023) Arango Sánchez, Alicia; Suárez Roldán, Juan CamiloThis article presents an analysis from the sense and the structure of two of the poems in the text Dancers of the Wind (Danzantes del viento): Stone and The Universe in his Eyes (“Piedra” y “El universo en sus ojos”), written by a Kamentsá contemporary author: Hugo Jamioy. From these two poems an interpretation is proposed, trying to find the sense of each text through syntax (personal, time and space deictics) and semantics (the meaning of some subjects as thought, his ancestors representation, objects mentioned in the poems, expressions that connotes the poetic voice’s ideas in relation with ancestral cultures, and how this is related in the construction of a complete sense).Publicación La división de Álvaro Mutis en cronista y personaje(Universidad EAFIT, 2023) Zapata Jiménez, Anderson; Suárez Roldán, Juan CamiloThe narrator of the novels Amirbar (1990) and Abdul Bashur: dreamer of ships (1991) is presented as Álvaro Mutis chronicler, who in turn narrates himself transforming himself into Mutis character. The intention of this article is to approach the episodes in which the novels allow the coexistence between the author and his conversion through memory into a character. Consequently, the first episode takes place in California, United States, and is set in Amirbar. In turn, the other two episodes take place in Rennes, France, and Urandá, Colombia, these stories are found in Abdul Bashur: Dreamer of Ships. The coexistence of non-corporeal entities will be approached from the theoretical notions of Mikhail Bakhtin: emotional condition and volitional condition; applied to Mutis character. In order to give news about the proximities and distances in the coexistence between the author and his character.