Questão feacd1a0-e7
Prova:CÁSPER LÍBERO 2014
Disciplina:Inglês
Assunto:Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

On the post, the phenomenon described as to have been captured most memorably by Machado

A brief survey of the short story part 47: Machado de Assis
Still neglected by English readers, the Brazilian writer is one of the very greatest of the early modern era

The Brazilian Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis is, to English-language readers, perhaps the most obscure of world literature’s great short-story writers. Producing work between 1869 and 1908, Machado wrote nine novels and more than 200 hundred stories, more than 60 of the latter appearing after 1880. This date marks the point at which Machado metamorphosed from a writer of romantic trifles into a master of psychological realism, seemingly overnight. The Brazilian poet and critic Augusto Meyer compared the shift to the one between Herman Melville’s earlier works and Moby-Dick.
The evolutionary leap is unquestionable, although the precise reasons for it are unclear. Indeed, many uncertainties surround the biography of Machado, who was an intensely private person. Perhaps it’s no surprise that such a man should create a body of work that prizes the puzzle above the certainty. Meyer called ambiguity Machado’s most prominent theme and the translators Jake Schmitt and Lorie Ishimatsu agree, seeing it as being “in part the result of his subjective, relativistic world view, in which truth and reality, which are never absolutes, can only be approximated; no character relationships are stable, no issues are clear-cut, and the nature of everything is tenuous.” Machado writes with pleasurable clarity – he worked as a journalist for a time – but the straightforwardness of his stories is a camouflage for less obvious, more troubling cargo.
(...)
Machado’s most recent English translator, John Gledson, says the difficulty of translating him is capturing the right balance of distance, understanding and sympathy. Trapdoors to the unexpected open constantly in his work, from the sadism of “The Hidden Cause”, or the bleak violence of “Father versus Mother”, to the subtle play of what Michael Wood terms his “quiet, complicated humour”. Reading him prompts thoughts of so many different writers that he can only be unique. Poe’s chilling shadow falls across “The Hidden Cause” and “The Fortune-Teller”. “The Alienist” glitters with Swiftian satire. Machado’s shrewd, even devious work with the point of view of his narrators positions him alongside Henry James. Numerous stories anticipate the moral ambiguity of Chekhov’s mature work, in particular “A Singular Occurrence”. Machado’s literary mapping of Rio reaches back to the St Petersburg of Gogol and Dostoevsky, and anticipates the Dublin of Joyce. Finally, some of his more obviously strange works (nearly all of it is strange to some degree, which is part of its brilliance) evoke Borges and Kafka. Given all this, it’s little wonder that writer and critic Kevin Jackson would feel confident enough to claim that Machado “invented literary modernity, sui generis”.
(...)
At its most pessimistic, as at the conclusion of “Dona Paula”, all pleasure lies in a past that proves impossible to meaningfully access.
This conception of a hollow, unreal present tied to a genuine but obliterated past finds a binary in Machado’s interest in the duality of the self, and the exploration of characters whose outer and inner personae differ radically. In “The Diplomat” this idea is expressed through the description of a man’s unexpressed passion for a friend’s daughter. In “A Famous Man” a hugely successful composer of polkas is wracked by his inability to compose ‘serious’ music. But it is in an earlier treatment of this theme, 1882’s “The Mirror”, that Machado captures the phenomenon most memorably. Alone in a desolate plantation house, Jacobina, a sub-lieutenant in the National Guard, finds his reflection growing dimmer and less distinct. The only way to bring it back into focus, and thus cling to reality, is to spend a period several hours each day standing before the mirror in his uniform. Jacobina steps out of this strange, haunting story to take his place alongside Chekhov’s Dmitri Gurov and Joyce’s Gabriel Conroy, men whose fatally divided selves leave them trapped in a limbo between their public and private personae. Just as the characters belong together, so do their creators; writing about Machado in 2002 Michael Wood complained, “Everyone who reads him thinks he is a master, but who reads him, and who has heard of him?” Not nearly so many as he deserves.
Quotations from the stories are translated by John Gledson, Jack Schmitt and Lorie Ishimatsu.
Source:POWER, Chris,The Guardian, Books Blog, Posted by Chris Power on Friday 1 March 2013 15.28 GMT http://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2013/mar/01/survey-short-story-machado (Adapted) Access November, 2014

A
is strange, part of its brilliance, and it evokes Kafka and Borges alongside with Chekhov’s Dmitri Gurov and Joyce’s Gabriel Conroy
B
corroborates with his title of master given by Kevin Jackson, Michael Wood, Chris Power and any of his probable future readers.
C
is related to his interests on the duality of the self together with the conception of a hollow, unreal present tied to an obliterated past.
D
could be compared to Poe’s, Gogol’s, Dostoevski’s, and Joyce’s mapping of cities and characters with their fatally divided selves .
E
is unique for it prompts thoughts of many writers like Melville, Poe, Chekhov and Joyce and their characters’ obssession with their past.

Gabarito comentado

J
João Mendes Monitor do Qconcursos

Tema central da questão: A questão avalia a capacidade de interpretar um texto em inglês, especificamente sobre a obra de Machado de Assis, e identificar, entre as alternativas, aquela que melhor expressa o fenômeno mais memoravelmente retratado pelo autor segundo o texto-base. O foco do texto está na “dualidade do eu” e na relação entre um presente vazio e um passado apagado, elementos marcantes debatidos no conto “O Espelho”.

Conceitos essenciais: Em “O Espelho”, e em outros textos de Machado, encontramos a análise da construção da identidade como composta de uma parte íntima (“alma interna”) e uma parte social/externa (“alma externa”). O “presente oco” é aquele em que a satisfação ou autenticidade está sempre em um passado inatingível.

Justificativa da alternativa correta (C):

A alternativa C diz que o fenômeno em questão “is related to his interests on the duality of the self together with the conception of a hollow, unreal present tied to an obliterated past”. Essa opção dialoga diretamente com o trecho: “This conception of a hollow, unreal present tied to a genuine but obliterated past finds a binary in Machado’s interest in the duality of the self, and the exploration of characters whose outer and inner personae differ radically.”

O comando pede o fenômeno "captured most memorably", e o texto logo após afirma que tal fenômeno está no conto “O Espelho”, centrado nestes temas. Utilizando a estratégia de skimming (leitura rápida para captar ideias principais) e scanning (busca direcionada de informações), destaca-se que a resposta vai além de simples referências literárias ou autores: ela aborda o núcleo da análise psicológica e existencial de Machado.

Análise das alternativas incorretas:

A) Apresenta autores, mas não destaca a essência temática central mencionada no texto.

B) Foca no reconhecimento crítico, não no fenômeno literário específico e sua relação com o texto.

D) Mistura autores e personagens, mas não enfatiza explicitamente a dualidade do eu ou o presente irreal como pontos principais.

E) Ressalta a singularidade e referências a outros escritores, mas não aborda a dualidade central mencionada e nem o contraste passado-presente.

Resumo e estratégia: Em questões de interpretação, observe sempre os conceitos centrais do texto, além das menções superficiais a outros autores ou obras. Utilize palavras-chave do texto para balizar sua resposta.

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