Devouring Hometowns: James Joyce’s Dublin and Dalton Trevisan’s Curitiba

Priscila Célia Giacomassi
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Abstract

The issue of geographical escape permeates the texts of Dubliners (1914) by James Joyce and Em busca de Curitiba perdida (1992) by Dalton Trevisan. In both works we come across characters who try to run away from a reality marked by frustration, decadence and paralysis. The impossibility of being able to leave the physical space of the city invariably leads them to sublimate this need through other types of evasion, such as the dream or daydream; the idealization of exotic and distant places; the temporal flight – by valuing the past at the expense of the present time; vices – mostly, drinking; superficial and fleeting relationships and, in the extreme, death as the ultimate solution to the hardships of which they are victims. Thus, Joyce’s Dublin and Trevisan’s Curitiba are not idealized, much less understood as places of protection and warmth – characteristics generally associated with the idea of hometown. In the fictional context in which they are presented, these cities function not only as settings, but as a large and stifling persona that imprisons its inhabitants and inexorably outlines their destinies.
吞噬家乡:詹姆斯·乔伊斯的都柏林和道尔顿·特雷维桑的库里提巴
地理上的逃避问题贯穿于詹姆斯·乔伊斯的《都柏林人》(1914)和道尔顿·特雷维桑的《埃姆布斯卡·德·库里提巴·佩迪达》(1992)的文本中。在这两部作品中,我们都看到了试图逃离以挫折、颓废和麻痹为标志的现实的人物。由于无法离开城市的物理空间,他们总是通过其他形式的逃避来升华这种需求,比如梦或白日梦;对异国情调和遥远地方的理想化;时间的逃避——以牺牲现在为代价来重视过去;恶习——主要是酗酒;肤浅和短暂的关系,在极端情况下,死亡是他们作为受害者的苦难的最终解决方案。因此,乔伊斯的都柏林和特雷维桑的库里提巴并不是理想化的,更不用说被理解为保护和温暖的地方——这些特征通常与家乡的概念有关。在虚构的背景中,这些城市不仅是背景,而且是一个巨大而令人窒息的角色,囚禁着它的居民,无情地勾勒出他们的命运。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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