• JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
 
  Bookmark and Share
 
 
Master's Dissertation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.11606/D.8.2008.tde-28092009-164836
Document
Author
Full name
Tatiana Aparecida Picosque
E-mail
Institute/School/College
Knowledge Area
Date of Defense
Published
São Paulo, 2008
Supervisor
Committee
Franco, Marcia Maria de Arruda (President)
Hansen, Joao Adolfo
Moreira, Marcello
Title in Portuguese
Da poética movente: uma prática quinhentista em diálogo com Herberto Helder
Keywords in Portuguese
Corpo
Herberto Helder
Poética movente
Poética quinhentista portuguesa
Processo
Abstract in Portuguese
osso objetivo, nesta dissertação, é analisar a poética de um século, a do XVI, e a poética de um autor, a de Herberto Helder. Trata-se de produções artísticas que se assemelham, pois, por motivos distintos, privilegiam o processo de criação poética, a obra inacabada, em detrimento ao produto final, a obra acabada. Ao mesmo tempo, demonstraremos que as categorias vigentes no imaginário do senso comum são insuficientes para explicitar poéticas, como estas, moventes. Enquanto obra em processo, constataremos que a produção quinhentista, sendo meio de comunicação social, caracteriza-se pela profusão de variantes, ao passo que a poética herbertiana caracteriza-se pela adoção de um princípio cosmológico: o devir. Pela adesão a este princípio, os poemas herbertianos são concebidos enquanto corpos, passíveis de transmutação e, concomitantemente, desencadeadores de transmutação. A poética herbertiana, ao eleger o devir como fundamento universal do existente, aparece em consonância com as filosofias da imanência e da materialidade da comunicação que, por sua vez, desempenham um papel significativo na cena do pensamento contemporâneo.
Title in English
From the poetic moving: a practice of the sixteenth century in dialogue with Herberto Helder
Keywords in English
Body
Herberto Helder
Poetic moving
Portuguese poetry of the sixteenth century
Process
Abstract in English
Our objective, at this dissertation, is to analyze the poetry of a century, the sixteenth, and the poetry of an author, of Herberto Helder. These are artistic productions similar because, for different reasons, favour the process of creating poetry, the unfinished work, in detriment to the final product, the finished work. At the same time, we´ll demonstrate that the existing categories in the imaginary of the common sense are insufficient to explain poetics, as these, moving. As work in process, we´ll evidence that the production of the sixteenth century, and means of social communication, characterizes by the proliferation of variants, while the poetry of Herberto Helder is characterized for the election adoption of a cosmological principle: the becoming. By the adhesion to this principle, the poems of Herberto Helder are considered as bodies, susceptible to the transmutation and, concomitantly, agents of transmutation. The poetic of Herberto Helder, to elect the becoming as existing universal basis, appears in accord with the philosophies of immanence and the materiality of communication which, in turn, play a important role in the scene of contemporary thought.
 
WARNING - Viewing this document is conditioned on your acceptance of the following terms of use:
This document is only for private use for research and teaching activities. Reproduction for commercial use is forbidden. This rights cover the whole data about this document as well as its contents. Any uses or copies of this document in whole or in part must include the author's name.
Publishing Date
2009-09-28
 
WARNING: Learn what derived works are clicking here.
All rights of the thesis/dissertation are from the authors
CeTI-SC/STI
Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations of USP. Copyright © 2001-2024. All rights reserved.