Análise literária e iconográfica do Vampiro em A Condessa Sangrenta, de Alejandra Pizarnik
Carregando...
Arquivos
Data
Autores
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
Resumo
This research proposes to lecture about the vampire figure in A Condessa
Sangrenta , by Alejandra Pizarnik. To do so, a folkloric study of the vampire myth is
necessary, permeating historical figures and their influences, as well as historical
vampiric accounts, in the transition from the folk to the literary figure. To base the
study, the dialogue with the researches of Raymond Mcnally and Radu Florescu in
his famous works Dracula myth or reality? and In Search of Dracula and other
vampires will aid in the making of the folk panorama that this creature is inserted.
The vampire, when migrating from folklore to literature, underwent transformations;
his social actions acquire philosophical problems and the character acquires
aesthetic innovation. The vampire is humanized but still endowed with alienism and
alienation from society. The nocturnal creature is starring in Alejandra Pizarnik's A
Condessa sangrenta (1967), a work inspired directly in the biographical essay of
Valentine Penrose, The Blood Countess , both narratives based on the crimes of
Erzsébeth Báthory, Countess Dracula, explored throughout the research . Published
in Brazil in 2011 by the Tordesilhas, A Condessa sangrenta is illustrated by
Santiago Caruso, an Argentine artist, influenced by symbolist and surrealist art,
linked to the obscure elements. Thus, the analysis is at least dual; both text and
illustration are the subject of research. The meeting of these two aristocratic figures,
given to Penrose and Pizarnik, impresses traits pertinent to the vampire; the
seduction, the dream, the love for beauty, the eternity and the challenge between the
limits of life and death.
Keywords: Literature, Iconography, Alejandra Pizarnik, Vampires, Elizabeth Bathory,
Santiago Caruso.