El mito de Orfeo en la poesía de Graciela Maturo: Canto de Eurídice (1966) : The myth of Orpheus in Graciela Maturo’s poem Canto de Eurídice (1966)

The myth of Orpheus has been widely recreated in Argentine literature of the twentieth and twenty first century. Canto de Euridyce (1966), a long poem by Graciela Maturo (Paraná, 1928) exemplifies its impact. The myth is recreated in this long poem from a feminine perspective that gives voice and pr...

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Autor principal: Zonana, Víctor Gustavo
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto de Lenguas y Literaturas Clásicas 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.uncu.edu.ar/ojs3/index.php/revistaestudiosclasicos/article/view/4370
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Sumario:The myth of Orpheus has been widely recreated in Argentine literature of the twentieth and twenty first century. Canto de Euridyce (1966), a long poem by Graciela Maturo (Paraná, 1928) exemplifies its impact. The myth is recreated in this long poem from a feminine perspective that gives voice and prominence to Euridyce, a fundamental but mute character in many of the classic and modern recreations. The analysis is oriented to examine how Maturo re-elaborates the katabasis sequence from the experience of loving abandonment, and the desire for reunion; how this experience and the affective states linked to it, are associated with the darkness/ light, descent/ ascent symbolism, the ouroboros and the primordial androgynous myth; finally, how, by virtue of the structure of the long poem an oscillation arises between lyricism and diegesis, which gives the character of Eurydice a heroic dimension.