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The letter\'s clamour: elements of ontology, mystic and the other in Cruz e Sousa´s work

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Author(s):
Anelito Pereira de Oliveira
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas (FFLCH/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Valentim Aparecido Facioli; Renato Bueno Franco; Aguinaldo José Gonçalves; Murilo Marcondes de Moura; Ivone Dare Rabello
Advisor: Valentim Aparecido Facioli
Abstract

This thesis investigates the origin and configuration of clamour in Cruz e Sousa´s work prose and verse, from pressupposition that aspect reveals questions about the constitution of being, the mistical experience and representation of other. Presents clearly only final fase sousiana´s work, in books like Evocações and Últimos sonetos, the clamour is a \"mode of discourse\" of authoral consciouness, according heideggeriana vision, aspect that results of intense criative process, a terminal situation of process. We considers here this process develops in five fases that we understand as moments of unique artistic experience of expression: in the first moment, we observes the complication of legibility of writing; in the second moment, we observes this complication descends from a problem of perception, because the subject doesn´t obtain to reveal what he perceives; in the third moment, we observes this complication is an efect of difficulty to distinguish subject and object; in the fourth moment, we observes that work is caracterized, after Missal, like moviment of figuration of inside, revealing a esthetics nature that isn´t in dialetical situation with external world; in the fifth moment, we observes, from Broquéis, a gradual effort for to say what isn´t possible to say, an effort to present what isn´t possible to verbalize. Those aspects, that we thinks from lacanian \"letter\" concept, permits to comprise the clamour like trace of identity of sousiana´s form, what reveals the singularity of an author and his work into brazilian culture. (AU)