Publication
La pluralité du moi dans quelques textes médiévaux
| Summary: | The texts and the characters hear referred to, show us characters who have a double identity when it comes to persons with an important role in history: empire makers, heroes, saints, for example. They have a double nature, human and divine, as Aeneas or Heracles, or even the saints created by a direct intervention of God. Others have a nature only human but which is formed by several actors, as Utherpendragon, King Arthur’s father. These facts are interpreted as being a way of referring to the complexity of the ego with the conceptual utensils of the epoch. |
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| Subject: | complexité du moi Dieu identité hero Moyen Âge Middle Age identity God héros complexity of the ego |
| Country: | Portugal |
| Document type: | journal article |
| Access type: | Open |
| Associated institution: | Carnets, Revista Electrónica de Estudos Franceses |
| Language: | French |
| Origin: | Carnets, Revista Electrónica de Estudos Franceses |
| Summary: | The texts and the characters hear referred to, show us characters who have a double identity when it comes to persons with an important role in history: empire makers, heroes, saints, for example. They have a double nature, human and divine, as Aeneas or Heracles, or even the saints created by a direct intervention of God. Others have a nature only human but which is formed by several actors, as Utherpendragon, King Arthur’s father. These facts are interpreted as being a way of referring to the complexity of the ego with the conceptual utensils of the epoch. |
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