
doi: 10.3828/bhs.85.6.7
handle: 1854/LU-445263
Estudiamos la protagonista del cuento 'Circe' a la luz de la rica tradicion del arquetipo de la femme fatale. Analizamos, primero, el personaje Delia Manara, que se construye a partir de fuentes variadas � artisticas e historicas, antiguas y modernas, biblicas y paganas, europeas y americanas � sobre la mujer mortifera legendaria. Arguiremos, despues, que Cortazar inscribe dicho personaje complejo y contradictorio en la vision circular del tiempo de Heraclito. La mujer fatal creada por Cortazar, de acuerdo con la teoria heraclitiana del Eterno Retorno, vuelve a aparecer en todas las epocas, siendo a la vez identica y diferente, a la vez Circe, Eva, Diana, the Siren, the spider woman y � Delia Manara. Bajo esta perspectiva, proponemos una lectura heraclitiana del cuento: su protagonista simboliza el Eterno Retorno de la femme fatale y encarna la unidad de lo multiple.
Languages and Literatures
Languages and Literatures
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