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Alabardas (2014)

par José Saramago

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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Months before his death, José Saramago felt once again the vital impulse from fiction to reflect on one of its major concerns: violence against persons and societies, which makes them victims and prevents them from owning their absolute lives. The result of this impulse is Halberds, halberds, muskets, shotguns, an exciting footprint inexhaustible fighting spirit of José Saramago and his last narrative will. The unfinished story has a moral conflict Artur Semedo Paz, an employee of a weapons factory, who, intrigued by the sabotage of a bomb during the Spanish Civil War and driven by Felicia, his former wife, began investigating the intricacies of an era convulsive, which aroused in him an intimate discussion between blindness imposed by the inherited fear and the need for commitment. This special edition, illustrated with engravings by Günter Grass, includes notes Saramago's work, in which the author presents what the end of the story would be told. It is further complemented with texts by Italian journalist and writer Roberto Saviano, and Spanish poet and essayist Fernando Gómez Aguilera. Halberds, halberds, muskets, shotguns is a reflection on power and destruction on how weapons feed the great ethical failure of humanity that are the wars, peace as the only possible way to break the apparent inevitability of violence .… (plus d'informations)
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Novela inacabada
  criera | Oct 17, 2022 |
Saramago escreveu este livro poucos meses antes de morrer, não chegando a terminá-lo, mas deixando uma porta aberta para que o leitor o possa continuar. Artur é um personagem que trabalha numa fábrica de armas e sua mulher Felícia é pacifista e ecologista. Um dia é descoberta uma bomba do tempo da guerra civil espanhola que não rebentou e que contém no seu interior um bilhete escrito em português ( não em espanhol) dizer : "Esta bomba não rebentará". É uma reflexão sobre o perigo do negócio de armas internacional para a paz e sobre a banalidade do mal, no sentido de que uma simples decisão de um senhor "simpático" numa empresa de armamento pode levar a uma guerra. Esta edição contém textos do poeta espanhol Fernando Aguillera e do escritor italiano Roberto Saviano. ( )
  gioacchinoponte | Nov 10, 2019 |
"Aquando do seu falecimento, em 2010, José Saramago deixou escritas trinta páginas daquele que seria o seu próximo romance; trinta páginas onde estava já esboçado o fio argumental, perfilados os dois protagonistas e, sobretudo, colocadas as perguntas que interessavam à sua permanente e comprometida vocação de agitar consciências.
Saramago escreve a história de Artur Paz Semedo, um homem fascinado por peças de artilharia, empregado numa fábrica de armamento, que leva a cabo uma investigação na sua própria empresa, incitado pela ex-mulher, uma mulher com carácter, pacifista e inteligente. A evolução do pensamento do protagonista permite-nos refletir sobre o lado mais sujo da política internacional, um mundo de interesses ocultos que subjaz à maior parte dos conflitos bélicos do século xx.
Dois outros textos – de Fernando Gómez Aguilera e Roberto Saviano – situam e comentam as últimas palavras do Prémio Nobel português, cuja força as ilustrações de um outro Nobel, Günter Grass, sublinham." in: Fnac.pt
  mediateca-esmf | Mar 2, 2015 |
Alabardas, alabardas, espingardas, espingardas es una reflexión sobre el poder y la destrucción, sobre cómo las armas alimentan el gran fracaso ético de la humanidad que son las guerras, sobre la paz como único camino posible para romper con la aparente inevitabilidad de la violencia.
  BibArnedo | Oct 29, 2014 |
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José Saramagoauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Saviano, RobertoContributeurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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Months before his death, José Saramago felt once again the vital impulse from fiction to reflect on one of its major concerns: violence against persons and societies, which makes them victims and prevents them from owning their absolute lives. The result of this impulse is Halberds, halberds, muskets, shotguns, an exciting footprint inexhaustible fighting spirit of José Saramago and his last narrative will. The unfinished story has a moral conflict Artur Semedo Paz, an employee of a weapons factory, who, intrigued by the sabotage of a bomb during the Spanish Civil War and driven by Felicia, his former wife, began investigating the intricacies of an era convulsive, which aroused in him an intimate discussion between blindness imposed by the inherited fear and the need for commitment. This special edition, illustrated with engravings by Günter Grass, includes notes Saramago's work, in which the author presents what the end of the story would be told. It is further complemented with texts by Italian journalist and writer Roberto Saviano, and Spanish poet and essayist Fernando Gómez Aguilera. Halberds, halberds, muskets, shotguns is a reflection on power and destruction on how weapons feed the great ethical failure of humanity that are the wars, peace as the only possible way to break the apparent inevitability of violence .

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