JACQUES Y SU AMO: UN VIAJE SIN DESTINO PARA TRES RELATOS DE AMOR
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Universidad Industrial de Santander
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SÍNTESISUn viaje del que poco se sabe su itinerario, es el motivo que ocupa gran parte de la novela del escritor francés, Denis Diderot, titulada Jacques el fatalista. Dos viajeros, un viaje puesto en el presente y una historia de amor vuelta pasado, son los personajes y el acontecimiento que convierten en novela el diálogo prolongado entre dos hombres sumidos en dos deseos y un mismo acontecimiento: el de querer conocer una historia que habla de amor y el de no querer acabar de narrarla. La obra aparece a fines del siglo XVIII y repercute en el siglo XX, con una versión escrita por Milan Kundera, quien en un viaje sin destino(,?) volcado sobre la meta de la novela, evoca a Diderot a partir de Jacques y su amo, obra en la que el amor, fatal o glorioso, vuelve a ocupar el lugar que le es propio, el del corazón humano.
SUMMARY A trip with a scanty known itinerary. This is the main body of the novel, "Jacques the Fatalist", by the French writer Denis Diderot. The Story is about two travellers, the main characteres; a trip lived in the present, and a love story turned past time. These characters; and these events turn the novel into an extended dialogue between the men. One who is desperate to know the love story and the other who is loathe to finish telling it. His seemingly aimmless trip did have one aim: To write the novel which evokes Diderot through Jacques and his master. In this novel the love- fatal and glorious- gets back its appropriate place: the human heart.
SUMMARY A trip with a scanty known itinerary. This is the main body of the novel, "Jacques the Fatalist", by the French writer Denis Diderot. The Story is about two travellers, the main characteres; a trip lived in the present, and a love story turned past time. These characters; and these events turn the novel into an extended dialogue between the men. One who is desperate to know the love story and the other who is loathe to finish telling it. His seemingly aimmless trip did have one aim: To write the novel which evokes Diderot through Jacques and his master. In this novel the love- fatal and glorious- gets back its appropriate place: the human heart.