This thesis aims to reflect on violence against women by analyzing and comparing Maryse Condé's works "Moi, Tituba sorcière… Noire de Salem" and Ivan Jablonka's "Laëtitia ou la fin des hommes." Both tell the stories of women whose lives are marked by violence, oppression, and a patriarchal structure responsible for the objectification of the female body. Although very different from each other as well as distant in space and time, they are united by the common intent to offer a valuable testimony to inequalities of gender and of a systemic violence that yesterday's society, as well as today's, has always fueled and normalized. These stories have given a voice back to the women whom violence has silenced, with the hope that the universal message they contain will forever nourish our consciences and Memory.
La tesi si propone di riflettere sulla violenza contro le donne mediante l'analisi e il confronto tra le opere "Moi, Tituba sorcière… Noire de Salem" di Maryse Condé e "Laëtitia ou la fin des hommes" di Ivan Jablonka; entrambe raccontano la storia di donne la cui vita è segnata dalla violenza, dall’oppressione e da una struttura patriarcale che è responsabile dell’oggettificazione del corpo femminile. Sebbene molto diverse tra loro nonché lontane nello spazio e nel tempo, risultano unite dal comune intento di offrire una preziosa testimonianza delle disuguaglianze di genere e di una violenza sistemica che la società di ieri, come anche quella di oggi, ha sempre alimentato e normalizzato. Queste storie hanno ridato voce alle donne che la violenza ha ridotto al silenzio, con la speranza che il messaggio universale in esse contenuto alimenti per sempre le nostre coscienze e la Memoria.
DU SILENCE À LA PAROLE. CORPS OPPRIMÉS, VOIX RÉDUITES AU SILENCE, MÉMOIRES RACHETÉES CHEZ MARISE CONDÉ ET IVAN JABLONKA
FABRIS, PIETRO
2024/2025
Abstract
This thesis aims to reflect on violence against women by analyzing and comparing Maryse Condé's works "Moi, Tituba sorcière… Noire de Salem" and Ivan Jablonka's "Laëtitia ou la fin des hommes." Both tell the stories of women whose lives are marked by violence, oppression, and a patriarchal structure responsible for the objectification of the female body. Although very different from each other as well as distant in space and time, they are united by the common intent to offer a valuable testimony to inequalities of gender and of a systemic violence that yesterday's society, as well as today's, has always fueled and normalized. These stories have given a voice back to the women whom violence has silenced, with the hope that the universal message they contain will forever nourish our consciences and Memory.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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DU SILENCE À LA PAROLE. CORPS OPPRIMÉS, VOIX RÉDUITES AU SILENCE, MÉMOIRES RACHETÉES CHEZ MARYSE CONDÉ ET IVAN JABLONKA - FABRIS PIETRO.pdf
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/100813