Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/23221
Type: | Artigo de Periódico |
Title: | Amor ou loucura? Eu e o outro, por Medeia, de Eurípedes, e Elize Matsunaga |
Authors: | Silva, Francisca Luciana Sousa da |
Keywords: | Amor;Ciúme;Medeia;Elize |
Issue Date: | 2013 |
Publisher: | Revista Entrelaces |
Citation: | SILVA, Francisca Luciana Sousa da. Amor ou loucura? Eu e o outro, por Medeia, de Eurípedes, e Elize Matsunaga. Revista Entrelaces, Fortaleza, ano 3, n. 1, p. 24-34, jul. 2013. |
Abstract in Brazilian Portuguese: | Duas belas mulheres, versadas em artes mágicas ou curativas – magia e enfermagem – relacionam-se com estrangeiros e deixam a casa paterna para seguir com eles. Elas, por sua vez, são tomadas de amor e guiadas pelo ciúme: agem por impulso da ira. Temem pela segurança dos filhos: uma prefere matá-los a vê-los padecer nas mãos de estranhos (seus inimigos); a outra mata o marido ao ser humilhada e ter a guarda da filha ameaçada. Sucumbem ante a traição e o ultraje do Outro – relação de estranheza e ambivalência. Ambas padecem de descontrole emocional, mas agem racional e meticulosamente: do planejamento à execução de seus crimes. São peritas na ação criminosa que engendram, mas com desfechos distintos. Causam mal-estar entre os seus e os outros. São tomadas por monstros. Como cada uma dessas mulheres (Medeia, de Eurípedes, e Elize Matsunaga) vê o Outro e o que o Outro vê nelas? O que as identifica? É o que pretende apontar o presente artigo. |
Abstract: | Two beautiful women, skillful at the arts of magic and healing – sorcery and nursery – engage themselves in a relationship with foreign men and abandon the house of their fathers to follow them. Both women are overwhelmed by the power of love and completely driven by jealously: they act by the impulse of pure rage. Both of them are worried about their children’s safety: one of them would rather kill them instead of seeing them in the hands of strange people (her enemies); the other one assassinates her own husband when he humiliates her and threatens to take her daughter’s custody. They both fall before the betrayal and outrage of the Other One – a strange and ambivalent relationship. Both women are emotionally out of control but nevertheless they act in a rational and meticulous way: from the planning stage to the very execution of their crimes. They are experts on their criminal actions, but each outcome is different. They caused unease among their people and others as well. They are seen as monsters. How does each of these women (Euripedes’ Medea and Elize Matsunaga) see the Other One and what does the Other One see in them? What does identify them? This article intends to find the answers to these questions. |
URI: | http://www.repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/23221 |
ISSN: | 1980-4571 (online) |
Access Rights: | Acesso Aberto |
Appears in Collections: | PPGLE - Artigos publicados em revistas científicas |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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2013_art_flssilva.pdf | 637,92 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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