Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue

The idyllic approach of this article deals with the dialogue between two distinct artworks: poems from the book Africa (Taylor, 2000), emphasizing the poem ‘Waikiki’, by the Australian poet, journalist and filmmaker Ken Taylor; and the movie Boy (Curtis, Gardiner, & Michael, 2010), directed by t...

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Main Author: Marcele Aires Franceschini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Maringá 2019-10-01
Series:Acta Scientiarum : Language and Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/ActaSciLangCult/article/view/45306
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spelling doaj-b2621ad4135a4725abe4400ef359861c2021-05-02T17:08:47ZengUniversidade Estadual de MaringáActa Scientiarum : Language and Culture1983-46751983-46832019-10-01412e45306e4530610.4025/actascilangcult.v41i2.4530645306Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogueMarcele Aires Franceschini0Pós-Doutoranda na Universidade Estadual de Londrina The idyllic approach of this article deals with the dialogue between two distinct artworks: poems from the book Africa (Taylor, 2000), emphasizing the poem ‘Waikiki’, by the Australian poet, journalist and filmmaker Ken Taylor; and the movie Boy (Curtis, Gardiner, & Michael, 2010), directed by the New Zealander film-director, actor and writer Taika Waititi. The poems and the movie are connected by synesthetic perceptions, mostly related to painting, colorizing and shaping that are displayed in the described scenarios. Hereby, these aspects were theoretically reviewed by the following authors: Rimbaud (1966), Kandinsky (1977), Ostrower (1977), Bachelard (1986, 2011), Cytowic (1993), Berger (2008), Lambert (2010), among others. The method of analysis includes the concepts in which the art producers uncovers the relationship between nature and the self, considering the fact that beyond poet and director, respectively Taylor and Waititi are also painters. Nature is widely open before their meditative eyes, therefore rather than outreaching the natural world with motionless expectations; both portray idyllic wonders related to individual/cultural scopes. As a result, from its amorphous state, words transmute themselves into landscapes, sensations, and forms. The aim was to follow the paths that image evocates in the description of each author, since they share contemplativeness, surrounded by consciousness, perceptions and freedom, all demanded during the creative process.http://www.periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/ActaSciLangCult/article/view/45306poetry; cinema; idyllic; sensations; dialogues.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcele Aires Franceschini
spellingShingle Marcele Aires Franceschini
Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
Acta Scientiarum : Language and Culture
poetry; cinema; idyllic; sensations; dialogues.
author_facet Marcele Aires Franceschini
author_sort Marcele Aires Franceschini
title Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
title_short Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
title_full Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
title_fullStr Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
title_full_unstemmed Idyllic Self in Africa (2000), by Ken Taylor and in Boy (2010), by Taika Waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
title_sort idyllic self in africa (2000), by ken taylor and in boy (2010), by taika waititi: a literary-cinematographic dialogue
publisher Universidade Estadual de Maringá
series Acta Scientiarum : Language and Culture
issn 1983-4675
1983-4683
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The idyllic approach of this article deals with the dialogue between two distinct artworks: poems from the book Africa (Taylor, 2000), emphasizing the poem ‘Waikiki’, by the Australian poet, journalist and filmmaker Ken Taylor; and the movie Boy (Curtis, Gardiner, & Michael, 2010), directed by the New Zealander film-director, actor and writer Taika Waititi. The poems and the movie are connected by synesthetic perceptions, mostly related to painting, colorizing and shaping that are displayed in the described scenarios. Hereby, these aspects were theoretically reviewed by the following authors: Rimbaud (1966), Kandinsky (1977), Ostrower (1977), Bachelard (1986, 2011), Cytowic (1993), Berger (2008), Lambert (2010), among others. The method of analysis includes the concepts in which the art producers uncovers the relationship between nature and the self, considering the fact that beyond poet and director, respectively Taylor and Waititi are also painters. Nature is widely open before their meditative eyes, therefore rather than outreaching the natural world with motionless expectations; both portray idyllic wonders related to individual/cultural scopes. As a result, from its amorphous state, words transmute themselves into landscapes, sensations, and forms. The aim was to follow the paths that image evocates in the description of each author, since they share contemplativeness, surrounded by consciousness, perceptions and freedom, all demanded during the creative process.
topic poetry; cinema; idyllic; sensations; dialogues.
url http://www.periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/ActaSciLangCult/article/view/45306
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