TY - JOUR
T1 - Trauma and the Fictional Self-Portrait in Margaret Atwood's Cat's Eye and Ana Teresa Pereira's As Rosas Mortas
AU - Paiva, Ana Brígida
N1 - info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/6817 - DCRRNI ID/UIDB%2F04097%2F2020/PT#
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/6817 - DCRRNI ID/UIDP%2F04097%2F2020/PT#
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/OE/UI%2FBD%2F151107%2F2021/PT#
UIDB/04097/2020
UIDP/04097/2020
UI/BD/151107/2021
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Found at the crossroads between aesthetics and referentiality, portraiture is a hybrid form of painting conflating inner and outer references. Although the perceived connection and 'likeness' between work of art and the subject being depicted seems to differentiate portraiture from other kinds of paintings, this relationship to a perceived reality is far from linear, particularly so when portraits or other works of art are represented in literature - a longstanding literary device known as ekphrasis. The present article will demonstrate how literary representations of portraiture (more specifically, of self-portraiture) can be used to symbolise a narrative's underlying themes and motifs, namely, in Margaret Atwood's Cat's Eye (1988) and Ana Teresa Pereira's As Rosas Mortas (1998). Elaine and Marisa, Atwood and Pereira's first-person narrators, are both painters creating and describing a variety of self-portraits inspired by childhood trauma, fragmented memories, and the subconscious mind. Artistic self-expression becomes, in these novels, the distorted and indirect medium through which Elaine and Marisa question, integrate, and accept the traumatic and, at times, the monstrous within. This article will compare Atwood and Pereira's use of ekphrasis and examine how fictional self-portraits can be used to explore the relationship between subject and self-representation - an essentially fragmented and unstable relationship, especially so for survivors of trauma.
AB - Found at the crossroads between aesthetics and referentiality, portraiture is a hybrid form of painting conflating inner and outer references. Although the perceived connection and 'likeness' between work of art and the subject being depicted seems to differentiate portraiture from other kinds of paintings, this relationship to a perceived reality is far from linear, particularly so when portraits or other works of art are represented in literature - a longstanding literary device known as ekphrasis. The present article will demonstrate how literary representations of portraiture (more specifically, of self-portraiture) can be used to symbolise a narrative's underlying themes and motifs, namely, in Margaret Atwood's Cat's Eye (1988) and Ana Teresa Pereira's As Rosas Mortas (1998). Elaine and Marisa, Atwood and Pereira's first-person narrators, are both painters creating and describing a variety of self-portraits inspired by childhood trauma, fragmented memories, and the subconscious mind. Artistic self-expression becomes, in these novels, the distorted and indirect medium through which Elaine and Marisa question, integrate, and accept the traumatic and, at times, the monstrous within. This article will compare Atwood and Pereira's use of ekphrasis and examine how fictional self-portraits can be used to explore the relationship between subject and self-representation - an essentially fragmented and unstable relationship, especially so for survivors of trauma.
KW - Comparative Arts
KW - Comparative Literature
KW - Ekphrasis
KW - Portraiture
KW - Trauma Studies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85140751557&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.5334/as.74
DO - https://doi.org/10.5334/as.74
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85140751557
SN - 0873-0628
VL - 20
SP - 1
EP - 13
JO - Anglo Saxonica
JF - Anglo Saxonica
IS - 1
M1 - 10
ER -