Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 913402
Pleasure and Pain: Corporeality in Ivan Mažuranić’s Smail-aga Čengić’s Death
Pleasure and Pain: Corporeality in Ivan Mažuranić’s Smail-aga Čengić’s Death // Myth and Its Discontents | Mythos und Ernüchterung. Memory and Trauma in Central and Eastern European Literature | Zu Trauma und (fraglicher) Erinnerung in Literaturen des zentralen und östlichen Europa / Lugarić, Danijela ; Car, Milka ; Tamás Molnár, Gábor (ur.).
Beč: Praesens Verlag, 2017. str. 91-105 (predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), ostalo)
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Naslov
Pleasure and Pain: Corporeality in Ivan Mažuranić’s Smail-aga Čengić’s Death
Autori
Protrka Štimec, Marina
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u zbornicima skupova, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), ostalo
Izvornik
Myth and Its Discontents | Mythos und Ernüchterung. Memory and Trauma in Central and Eastern European Literature | Zu Trauma und (fraglicher) Erinnerung in Literaturen des zentralen und östlichen Europa
/ Lugarić, Danijela ; Car, Milka ; Tamás Molnár, Gábor - Beč : Praesens Verlag, 2017, 91-105
ISBN
978-3-7069-0944-0
Skup
Myth and Its Discontents | Mythos und Ernüchterung. Memory and Trauma in Central and Eastern European Literature | Zu Trauma und (fraglicher) Erinnerung in Literaturen des zentralen und östlichen Europa
Mjesto i datum
Lovran, Hrvatska, 24.09.2015. - 27.09.2015
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija
Ključne riječi
body, pain, corporeality, memory, Ivan Mažuranić
Sažetak
The main aim of this essay is to connect the role of bodily practices with collective memory, collective myths and trauma, as well as with the post-revolutionary ideas in Ivan Mažuranić’s eponymous epic poem Smail-aga Čengić’s Death (Smrt Smail-age Čengića, 1846). This canonical text marked not only the Croatian 19th century literature and culture, but also redefined various long-lasting national metaphors such as Antemurale Christianitatis (Bulwark of Christianity) that labeled a frontier defense of Christian Europe from the Ottoman Empire. If we analyze Mažuranić’s poem in the framework of the post-revolutionary ideological practices which presume the idea of political freedom as universal right and the final purpose of every society and each governmental system, various direct or indirect references to the French Revolution will be found in the text, and most notably the geopolitical importance of the peripheral “small” nations in the European cultural and ideological landscape. As an allegory, Smail-aga Čengić’s Death reverberates the modernist idea that historical progress inevitably throws down any despotism and shows that fuit tyrannos signifies a diametrical reposition in the roles of a sovereign as a figure who stands above the law. To that end Aga changes his position: from a sovereign he becomes homo sacer (according to G. Agamben), the one who remains outside the law/society/community. In Mažuranić’s poem, tormented, colossal body of the voiceless nation is transformed into a strong agent of history, and the former sovereign, as a torturer – a colossal voice with no body (E. Scarry) – becomes “a marvelous marvel, ” merely a puppet of history, an amusing thing.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski