Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

How Pilate’s hand-washing washed away collective and individual memory –The Motif of Pontius Pilate in the literary endeavour of Ivan Aralica

Ivan Odža orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-5699-0563 ; University of Split, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Split, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 363 Kb

page 179-207

downloads: 403

cite


Abstract

The philological analysis of several literary works of Ivan Aralica (novellas and novels) focuses on using motifs related to Pontius Pilate. These motifs are observed within the oral literary tradition as a substrate widely represented in the overall literary endeavour of Ivan Aralica. While Pontius Pilate does not significantly deviate from his usual Biblical image in oral literary forms (re-establishing thus the collective “author” as the intertextual narrator insusceptible to significant conceptual interventions with respect to the original text), Aralica uses different intertextual techniques to build his own attitude towards the motif of Pontius Pilate. Contrary to the common portrayal of Pontius Pilate as a literary figure in fiction, Aralica used his Biblical position which is dominant in the oral literary tradition and upgraded it with a vast spectrum of meanings. By using a network of attributed meanings, he tried to tackle the issue of the interrelation of personal and collective responsibility. He leans on the concept of history defined by his historical novels (although the analysis included works beyond his novels), namely history as a(n) (un)prolific source of memory. He, advocates, sometimes vaguely, personal responsibility as the (potentially) right way for collective responsibility.

Keywords

Aralica; Bible; intertextuality; history; Pontius Pilate; memory; “washing hands”; oral literary tradition

Hrčak ID:

253994

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/253994

Publication date:

1.3.2021.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 990 *