Between humans and beasts: the fictional uncanny in The Great God Pan and Shame

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2017v70n1p91

Abstract

The purpose of this work is to analyze two fictional works, Arthur Machen’s novella The Great God Pan and Salman Rushdie’s novel Shame, which contain unusual situations and events, examining them to discuss how the fantastic elements in both texts relate to the  context of production of the works, that is, respectively, the nineteenth century and the second half of the twentieth century. Machen promoted a break with the tradition of horror stories, then in vogue, and Rushdie introduced features of Magical Realism into the Indian Postcolonial Literature. Temporally distant, the two works resort to the same device, typical of fantastic fiction, the metamorphosis of characters, and, through it, the authors build a subliminal criticism of the political and social system dominant in their own time.

Author Biography

Shirley de Souza Gomes Carreira, State University of Rio de Janeiro

Doutora em Literatura Comparada (UFRJ). Pós-Doutorado em Literaturas de Língua Inglesa(UERJ). Mestra em Linguística Aplicada (UFRJ).

Professora Adjunta da Faculdade de Formação de Professores da UERJ.

Published

2017-01-27

Issue

Section

Articles