Políticas espaciais em Rosencrantz e Guildenstern Estão Mortos, de Tom Stoppard

Autores

  • Elham Kazemi Universidade Kharazmi
  • Mohsen Hanif Kharazmi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2017v70n1p287

Resumo

Este artigo examina a noção de política espacial em Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, de Tom Stoppard. Os dois cortesãos entram no mundo politicamente convulsivo de Hamlet, onde nenhuma estrutura de poder legítimo toma conta do estado. Sua racionalidade política regularizada deixa de ser aplicável ao mundo; a realidade viola o conhecimento empírico -  direções geográficas e espirituais, e, geralmente, identidade - de Rosencrantz e Guildenstern. As funções previamente definidas de lugares, ou heterotopias (em termos de Foucault), estão em um estado de suspensão. Portanto, eles estão perdidos no meio dos conjuntos desconhecidos de relações espaciais; qualquer tipo de ato intencional escapa-lhes; morrem e desaparecem absurdamente em um lugar sem lugar.

Biografia do Autor

Elham Kazemi, Universidade Kharazmi

Elham Kazemi has an MA in English Literature from Kharazmi University of Tehran,  Iran. Her current research focuses on postmodernism and modern drama.

Mohsen Hanif, Kharazmi


Assistant professor of English Literature at University of Kharazmi, Iran. He has published articles on Persian and comparative literature, as well as American ethnic minorites' fiction. He also has published a book in Persian on War Fiction and has a another under publication about magical realism in Iran.

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Publicado

2017-01-27

Edição

Seção

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