The aim of this paper is to outline the links between adventure novel and the afterlife. Starting with Don Quixote and Robinson Crusoe, which can be considered – for different reasons – the models of the modern adventure tale, the focus is then shifted on two novels published between the end of 19th and the beginning of 20th century, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Master of Ballantrae and Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, that make a crucial step in the history of the genre. A specific attention is given to the depiction of the main characters of the two novels, mysterious and, in a sense, diabolic heroes who seem to have a special relationship with the afterlife. The proposed thesis is that the afterlife in the adventure novel – and more specifically in these two examples – is configured as a border territory, absorbed into an immanent dimension and functional, in different ways, to the narrative structure of the tales.
L'articolo delinea i rapporti tra rappresentazione dell'aldilà e romanzo d'avventura, partendo dai modelli moderni del genere (Don Chisciotte e Robinson Crusoe), per poi focalizzarsi su due casi esemplari, Il Master di Ballantrae di Robert Louis Stevenson e Cuore di tenebra di Joseph Conrad. Un'attenzione specifica viene rivolta alla raffigurazione dei personaggi principali dei due testi, eroi misteriosi e diabolici che intrattengono una relazione privilegiata con l'aldilà. La tesi di fondo è che il mondo ultraterreno, in questi e altri romanzi d'avventura, si configura come un territorio di confine, riassorbito nella dimensione immanente e funzionale soprattutto alla configurazione narrativa dei racconti.
Carati, S. (2024). Al confine con l'aldilà. Ipotesi sul romanzo d'avventura. ECHO, Afterworlds. Comunicazione e rappresentazione dell'aldilà, 48-59.
Al confine con l'aldilà. Ipotesi sul romanzo d'avventura
simone carati
2024
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to outline the links between adventure novel and the afterlife. Starting with Don Quixote and Robinson Crusoe, which can be considered – for different reasons – the models of the modern adventure tale, the focus is then shifted on two novels published between the end of 19th and the beginning of 20th century, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Master of Ballantrae and Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, that make a crucial step in the history of the genre. A specific attention is given to the depiction of the main characters of the two novels, mysterious and, in a sense, diabolic heroes who seem to have a special relationship with the afterlife. The proposed thesis is that the afterlife in the adventure novel – and more specifically in these two examples – is configured as a border territory, absorbed into an immanent dimension and functional, in different ways, to the narrative structure of the tales.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


