This article analyzes the protagonist of Nemesis, Eugene “Bucky” Cantor, in order to delineate those elements that define him not only as a Promethean figure, but as a modern incarnation of both Job and Oedipus. The evocative power of these archetypes contributes to establishing the tragic framework of the novel and the heroic status of its protagonist, both of which resist the narrator’s attempt to deconstruct them in the final chapter.

Nemesis and the Persistence of Tragic Framing: Bucky Cantor as Job, Hebrew Prometheus, and Reverse Oedipus.

STANGHERLIN, NICHOLAS
2016-01-01

Abstract

This article analyzes the protagonist of Nemesis, Eugene “Bucky” Cantor, in order to delineate those elements that define him not only as a Promethean figure, but as a modern incarnation of both Job and Oedipus. The evocative power of these archetypes contributes to establishing the tragic framework of the novel and the heroic status of its protagonist, both of which resist the narrator’s attempt to deconstruct them in the final chapter.
2016
Volume 12, Number 1, Spring 2016
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10278/3676250
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