NÓBREGA, Mônica Leite.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/8121057709038993; NÓBREGA, Mônica Leite da.
Resumo:
There are many publications in the educational context that deal with the teaching of
literature. They show a challenge and, therefore, a concern of many teachers: the
formation of literary readers. In this perspective, a professional of this área could ask
himself/herself: would us teachers be efficient mediators in this process of forming
critical readers of literature? How could we act in classes to promote literary literacy?
Based on these questions and in many scholars, this research aims at finding
methodological alternatives to guide teachers work as an attempt to give new meanings
to the context of teachers practices, in order to help the development of students’ reading
skills. Thus, this dissertation analyzes theories about teaching literature, especially about
literary reading in the school context; to recognize, according to Applied Linguistics
views and Postcolonialist theories, the novel that will guide our proposal of developing
of literary literacy in school, according to Cosson (2014), which is a basic didatic
sequence for students of the Brazilian 9th grade school year, having as the main text, the
novel Jane Eyre (1847), by the English writer Charlotte Brontë. For such an enterprise,
the theoreticall support will come from Cosson (2014), Colomer (2007), Zilberman
(2012) and Terra (2014), among others. In relation to Applied Linguistics and
Postcolonialim, Moita-Lopes (2006), Dias (2011), Bonnici (2000 e 2005), Said (1994 e
2003), Kanavillil Rajagopalan (2013) and Hall (1996). We believe that the intervention
proposal here presented will be a decisive tool for the work with literary texts that can
help readers (teachers and students) deconstruct some preconcepts and prejudices still
present in their discourses, since we will unveil colonial and postcolonial issues that the
main text bring into light.