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dc.contributor.advisorAlexander, Ianpt_BR
dc.contributor.authorMachado, Rust Costapt_BR
dc.date.accessioned2014-11-13T02:14:40Zpt_BR
dc.date.issued2014pt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10183/106875pt_BR
dc.description.abstractThis work examines the uses of metafiction within the novel Everything Is Illuminated, addressing specifically, at a subjective level, the effects of the novel’s different narrative levels on the reading experience. While this novel reproduces the opposition between reality and fiction within the narration of the Holocaust in Soviet Ukraine with the aid of two narrators, I contend here that the structure of this novel creates a crisis of referentiality whose main purpose is to diminish the distance between the reader and the content narrated, entangling the reader’s level of reality into the maze of narrative voices in order to provide the reading experience with a double perspective – Jew and Gentile – on the effects of the memory of the Holocaust in the present of its narrators.en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfpt_BR
dc.language.isoengpt_BR
dc.rightsOpen Accessen
dc.subjectMetaficçãopt_BR
dc.subjectMetafictionen
dc.subjectLevels of realityen
dc.subjectHolocaustopt_BR
dc.subjectRomancept_BR
dc.subjectHolocausten
dc.titleIlluminated manuscript : uses and effects of metafiction in Everything is illuminatedpt_BR
dc.typeTrabalho de conclusão de graduaçãopt_BR
dc.identifier.nrb000941670pt_BR
dc.degree.grantorUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sulpt_BR
dc.degree.departmentInstituto de Letraspt_BR
dc.degree.localPorto Alegre, BR-RSpt_BR
dc.degree.date2014pt_BR
dc.degree.graduationLetras: Licenciaturapt_BR
dc.degree.levelgraduaçãopt_BR


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