Resumen
While Christian theologians have insisted on the sublime nature of the Eucharist, or symbolic consumption of Christ’s flesh and blood, other scholars have emphasized the contradictory urges of desire and aggression which characterize all metaphors of incorporation –– Communion, cannibalism, sexual intercourse, and eating –– in which the consumer seeks to absorb or subsume the Other. In Carne (1985), the Argentine dramatist Eduardo Rovner collapses all four acts of incorporation, as the work’s female protagonist permits her lover to consume her breast in order to insure his loyalty. However, while Carne underscores the unstable relationship between consumer/consumed and outside/inside, thereby problematizing the relation of power between the male consumer and the consumed feminine body, ultimately the work enacts the misogynist violence of the most recent military dictatorship. (AS, Article in English)All items © The Center of Latin American Studies and Caribbean Studies, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, U.S.A. Authors: If you prefer to remove your text(s) from this database please contact Dr. Stuart A. Day (day@ku.edu)
Métricas
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