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The pearl necklaceThe pearl necklace

The pearl necklace1992

Roberto Reis

About this book

"In his first book-length publication in English, Roberto Reis reevaluates the Brazilian literary canon, stressing the authoritarian undercurrent in much of that country's cultural discussion and rejecting the idea that literature has been a force for positive social change.". "Reis analyzes eight works of fiction written during what he calls the "transition period," the years between 1850 and 1950, when Brazil advanced from an agrarian society into an urban society. His map of the country's modernization reveals the role of intellectuals - often co-opted in construction of a strong, central state - and the aversion toward history that he says characterizes much of Brazilian social formation. Even Brazil's leftist literature parallels the history written by the dominant groups, he argues, and it perpetuates the unjust, closed, and elitist structure of the State. He sums up the concerns of the book by asserting "History must be taken as a problem."". "Organized around the metaphor of a pearl necklace, each chapter (or bead on the strand) addresses a specific feature of the authoritarian question. The writers discussed - those ignored by contemporary Brazilian criticism as well as those canonized - include Jose de Alencar, Humberto de Campos, Jose Lins do Rego, Graciliano Ramos, Galeao Coutinho, and Carlos Drummond de Andrade. Machado de Assis and Erico Verissimo are the two discussed here "whose literary practice fractures the monolithic solidity of discursive certainty," linking them to "writers such as Oswald de Andrade, Joao Guimaraes Rosa, and Clarice Lispector" (Randal Johnson in the foreword)."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

First published
1992
OL Work ID
OL1757579W

Subjects

History and criticismBrazilian prose literatureModernism (Literature)Literature and society

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.