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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A subalternidade em Cloud Atlas, de David Mitchell / The subalternity in Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell

Souza, Davi Silistino de 09 February 2018 (has links)
Submitted by Davi Silistino de Souza (dvssouza@hotmail.com) on 2018-02-27T18:37:49Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Dissertação - Davi.pdf: 1308006 bytes, checksum: 3dbf8e602397954ecbcacf60eed1b2b6 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Elza Mitiko Sato null (elzasato@ibilce.unesp.br) on 2018-02-28T14:52:18Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 souza_ds_me_sjrp.pdf: 1308006 bytes, checksum: 3dbf8e602397954ecbcacf60eed1b2b6 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2018-02-28T14:52:18Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 souza_ds_me_sjrp.pdf: 1308006 bytes, checksum: 3dbf8e602397954ecbcacf60eed1b2b6 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-02-09 / Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) Coordenação de confiança e Aperfeiçoamento de financiamento desta Pessoal de Nível pesquisa Superior (CAPES) / As injustiças e opressões enfrentadas pelos subalternos vêm sido estudadas há algumas décadas pelos Grupos de Estudos Subalternos, seja o de origem indiana ou latina. Com o auxílio dessas pesquisas, na contemporaneidade, os indivíduos excluídos adquirem voz, sendo ouvidos e respeitados na sociedade. Considerando esses fatos, a dissertação tem como objetivo contribuir para esse enfrentamento, ao estudar de que maneira a subalternidade é representada nas personagens de Cloud Atlas (2004), romance escrito por David Mitchell. Em nossas análises, evidenciaremos a presença de uma crítica às estruturas hegemônicas na construção das protagonistas, pertencentes a sociedades organizadas em hierarquias sociais e econômicas que propiciam a subjugação e abafamento da voz dos marginalizados. Verificaremos como Mitchell dá voz a personagens subversoras da relação de desprezo, ataque ou mesmo silenciamento. Como aparato crítico-teórico, fundamentamos nossa pesquisa em Grosfoguel (2008), Mignolo (2007) e Castro-Goméz (2005), para discutir questões relacionadas à decolonialidade; em Foucault (2015), Rabinow e Rose (2006), para tratar do conceito de biopoder; em Butler (2003), Foucault (1980) e Stadniky (2007), para estudar as questões de identidade e gênero; em Arendt (2000), Bauman (2014), Butler e Spivak (2007), para debater acerca da liberdade dos subalternos; em Bauman (2014) e Eagleton (2004; 1996), para estudar conceitos relacionados à contemporaneidade; e, por fim, Bhabha (2013) e Santana (2008), para discutir questões relacionadas às diversas concepções de tempo. / Injustices and oppressions faced by subalterns have been studied for some decades by Subaltern Studies Groups, whether of Indian or Latin origin. With the aid of the group researches, contemporarily, excluded individuals acquire a voice, being heard and respected. Considering these facts, the dissertation aims to contribute to this fight by studying how subalternity is represented in characters in Cloud Atlas (2004), a novel written by David Mitchell. In our analysis, we will highlight the presence of hegemonic structure critiques in the construction of characters from subaltern groups. They belong to societies organized in a social and economic hierarchy, responsible for subjugation and muffling of subaltern’s voices. We will observe how Mitchell gives voice to characters who subvert the contempt, attack or even muzzling subalterns. As a criticaltheoretical approach, we base our research on Grosfoguel (2008), Mignolo (2007) and Castro-Goméz (2005), to discuss issues related to decoloniality; in Foucault (2015), Rabinow and Rose (2006), to deal with the concept of biopower; in Butler (2003), Foucault (1980) and Stadniky (2007), to study identity and gender issues; in Arendt (2000), Bauman (2014), Butler and Spivak (2007), to discuss subaltern freedom; in Bauman (2014) and Eagleton (2004, 1996), to study concepts related to contemporaneity; and finally, Bhabha (2013) and Santana (2008), to discuss issues related to different conceptions of time. / 2015/25282-4
2

Re-Construction Through Fragmentation: A Cosmodern Reading of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas

Miller, Beth Katherine 01 May 2015 (has links)
A cosmodern reading of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas creates a positive vision of the future for readers through various techniques of fragmentation including fragmentation of voice, language, and time. By fragmentation, I have in mind the consistent interruption of the novel’s voice, language, and time that requires an active and aware readership. The reader’s interaction with the text makes the novel re-constructive. In fact, the global nature of Mitchell’s novel, its hopeful ending, and its exploration of the effects of globalization can be considered as a means of exploring the dynamic relationships between the characters, the reader, and Mitchell’s authorial voice. Rather than falling back on familiar postmodernist truisms such as the hopelessness of genuine communication or the impossibility of truth, Mitchell creates a hopeful vision of the future of the world, one that champions the life, agency, and personal narrative of the individual.
3

SCENE STIR: How we begin to see the biosphere in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas

Cavalier, Vincent January 2015 (has links)
This essay marks the degrading biosphere in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and argues that its narrative disclosure is meaningfully explored using the idea of a growing ecological awareness. The book depicts agentive nonhumans that are unseen or under-attended by the novel’s humans. I suggest this literary presentation of the biosphere is best understood as after the discovery of global warming when matters of ecological concern “intruded,” to use Timothy Morton’s word, on a human-only society with underequipped modes of historical thought. To construct my reading, I motivate recent work in object-oriented philosophies that would eschew anthropocentric metaphysics. I unpack Cloud Atlas’ ecological vision using Morton’s philosophy in which he explores the conceptual and aesthetic consequences of the hyperobject – a thing that is massively distributed in time and space relative to humans. My analysis will examine passages and techniques that construct Cloud Atlas’ “scenery,” and I argue that they evoke a degrading biosphere that interacts substantially with the human-only personal dramas. Features of the book’s formal construction allow for the animation of this scenery in the reader’s cross-novel interpretation. I look at how characters narrate this scenery to build my argument that the novel’s ecological vision makes claims on its storytelling characters. But as those characters still miss the long-view historical perspectives afforded the reader, they are shown to want community. I end by ruminating on how Cloud Atlas, which would “stretch” the literary novel, questions what the novel is at this ecological moment.
4

David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas : "revolutionary or gimmicky?" : a thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand

Johnston-Ellis, Sarah Jane January 2010 (has links)
This thesis will examine David Mitchell’s use of postmodern narrative structures and strategies in Cloud Atlas and how these relate to his overtly political concerns regarding relations of power between individuals and between factions. This will involve a discussion of debates surrounding the political efficacy of postmodern narrative forms. I will consider Mitchell’s prolific use of intertextual and intratextual allusion and his mimicry of a wide range of narrative modes and genres. These techniques, along with the complex structural iterations in the novel and the ‘recurrence’ of characters between its parts, appear to reinforce a thematic concern with the interconnectedness — indeed, the repetition — of human activity, through time and a fatalistic conception of being that draws on two central Nietzschean notions, eternal recurrence and the will to power. The vision of humanity and human relations of power that is expressed within Cloud Atlas is open to extended analysis in Foucauldian terms. Against this apparently nihilistic backdrop, Mitchell appears to promote a notion of (albeit limited) individual agency and the capacity for creative narration and reinterpretation of the past as a means to devise new ‘truths’ and explore new ‘meanings’ for the present and the future. I will explore the ways in which Mitchell’s metafictional self-reflexivity (and that of his protagonists), offers a vision of hope and political agency that counters the apparent (Nietzschean) fatalism of the novel.
5

Fractional Prefigurations : Science Fiction, Utopia, and Narrative Form

2015 June 1900 (has links)
The literary utopia is often accused of being an outmoded genre, a graveyard for failed social movements. However, utopian literature is a surprisingly resilient genre, evolving from the static, descriptive anatomies of the Renaissance utopias to the novelized utopian romances of the late nineteenth century and the self-reflexive critical utopias of the 1970s. The literary utopia adapts to the needs of the moment: what form(s) best represent the fears and desires of our current historical period? In this dissertation I perform a close reading of three exemplary texts: John Brunner’s Stand on Zanzibar (1968), Ursula K. Le Guin’s Always Coming Home (1985), and David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas (2004). While I address topics specific to each text, my main focus is on the texts’ depictions of utopia and their spatialized narrative forms. In Stand on Zanzibar Brunner locates the utopian impulse in three registers—the political/bureaucratic, the technical/scientific, and the human(e)—and explores how their interplay constitutes the utopian space. In Always Coming Home Le Guin renovates the classical literary utopia, problematizing its uncritical advocacy of the “Judaeo-Christian-Rationalist-West” but preserving much of the older utopia’s form. In Cloud Atlas the networked narrative structure reflects and enables the heterogeneous, non-hierarchical, and processual utopian communities depicted in the novel. In these science fictional works the spatialized techniques of juxtaposition, discontinuity, and collage —commonly associated with a loss of historical depth and difference—are used to create utopian spaces founded on contingency and human choice. I contend that science fiction is a historical genre, one that is invested in representing societies as contingent historical totalities. Science fiction’s generic tendencies modify the context that a spatialized narrative form functions in, and in changing the context changes its effects. By utilizing a spatialized narrative form to embody a contingent practice, Brunner, Le Guin, and Mitchell cast the future—and the present—as historical, as something that can be acted upon and changed: they have provided us with strategies for envisioning better futures and, potentially, for mobilizing our visions of the future for positive change in the present.
6

Montage polyphonique et excessif chez les Wachowski : les doubles connexions de sens dans Sense8 et Cloud Atlas

Bich, Clara 04 1900 (has links)
No description available.
7

Literary Speculations: Postmodern Dystopia and the Future of Books

Corrie, Emily P 17 August 2012 (has links)
This thesis identifies a trend in recent postmodern dystopian fiction for writers to metafictionally dwell on the place of literature in a future context. This trend springs from similar concerns present in the two most influential dystopian novels of the 20th century, Brave New World and Nineteen Eighty-Four. Yet, unlike Huxley and Orwell, for whom the marginalization of literature is merely one symptom of the hegemonic control oppressing these future societies, the postmodern writers I identify situate the book’s future disappearance at the epicenter of culture’s demise. In Gary Shteyngart’s Super Sad True Love Story (2010), electronic technologies have virtually eradicated print literature and the novel’s protagonist, Lenny, mourns the changes in social interactions he sees this shift in technology bringing about. In Jeanette Winterson’s The Stone Gods (2007), marginalized book-lovers see the devastation humanity continuously wreaks on the environment as a product of culture’s disdain for literature.
8

«Эволюция языка»: конструирование языков разных эпох в романе Дэвида Митчелла «Облачный атлас» : магистерская диссертация / “Language evolution”: constructing languages of different epochs in the novel “Cloud Atlas” by D. Mitchell

Хайдаршина, Ю. Р., Khaydarshina, Y. R. January 2017 (has links)
Данная магистерская диссертация посвящена исследованию способов конструирования языков разных эпох в романе «Облачный атлас». Актуальность работы обусловлена как дефицитом работ, рассматривающих лингвистические эксперименты в современной художественной литературе, так и недостатком в отечественной филологии работ, посвященных творчеству Дэвида Митчелла, которое приобретает все большую популярность. В первой главе рассматриваются теоретические основы воплощения текстового времени и исторической стилизации в художественной литературе. Во второй главе рассматривается такое понятие, как искусственный язык, а также феномен вымышленного языка как подкласса искусственных языков. В третьей главе приводится описание творческой биографии Дэвида Митчелла, структурные особенности его романа «Облачный атлас», а также жанровое своеобразие произведения и представленный в нем спектр тематики. В четвертой главе исследуются способы воплощения английского языка XIX века. В пятой главе рассматриваются характеристики созданных автором английских языков будущего. / The master’s thesis is devoted to exploring the ways of constructing languages of different epochs in the novel “Cloud Atlas”. The relevance of this research work is highlighted by the fact that today within the realm of Russian philology there can be found only a few works dedicated to D. Mitchell and his writing; also it should be mentioned that there are not enough works aimed at investigating linguistic experiments in fiction. The first chapter deals with the theory connected with depicting time in fiction and the phenomenon of ‘historical stylization’. The second chapter explores the term ‘artificial language’ and introduces the notion of an ‘invented language’ as a subclass of artificial languages. The third chapter contains the biography of the author and some information on his novel ‘Cloud Atlas’. The fourth chapter analyzes the means of creating the English language of the 19th century in the text. The fifth chapter investigates peculiar features of languages of the future invented by D. Mitchell himself.
9

Pyramid och mosaik : En jämförande adaptionsanalys av den narrativa strukturen mellan romanen Cloud Atlas och dess filmatisering

Arrhénborg, Ludvig January 2016 (has links)
En adaptionsanalys som utforskar relationen mellan romanen Cloud Atlas av David Mitchell och dess filmatisering (2012) av Tom Tykwer och syskonen Wachowski. Fokuset ligger på skillnader och likheter i narrativ och vilka visuella möjligheter som kunnat tillföras när romanens handlingen gjordes om till filmformat.
10

Between Artifice and Actuality: The Aesthetic and Ethical Metafiction of Vladimir Nabokov and David Mitchell

McDonald, Trent A. 14 May 2014 (has links)
No description available.

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