Reciprocal narratives in Que bom te ver viva(Lúcia Murat, 1989)

Autor: Brás, Patrícia Sequeira
Zdroj: The Journal of Romance Studies; June 2021, Vol. 21 Issue: 2 p165-183, 19p
Abstrakt: Directed by Brazilian filmmaker Lúcia Murat, Que bom te ver viva[How nice to see you alive] (1989) interlaces the testimonies of eight female political prisoners with a monologue voiced by an anonymous female fictional character. All allude to the experience of torture under the military dictatorial regime in Brazil. Given that Murat was a militant student imprisoned and tortured during the dictatorship, the film appears to have an autobiographical motivation. I argue, however, that the interlacing of fictional monologue and ‘real’ testimonies effaces this motivation. Rather, the intersection between fictional and testimonial accounts offers a reciprocal recognition between interviewees and filmmaker, allowing for the inscription of these individual stories into the historical narrative. I also argue that this reciprocal recognition is anchored in the feminist practice of storytelling, practised in consciousness-raising feminist groups in the 1960s and 1970s. Adriana Cavarero’s philosophy of narration underpins my analysis.
Databáze: Supplemental Index