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Lima Barreto: New Critical Perspectives

Contributor(s): Fitz, Earl E (Contribution by), Wasserman, Renata R M (Contribution by), Vieira, Nelson H (Contribution by), Schwarcz, Lilia Moritz (Contribution by), Oliveira, Emanuelle K F (Contribution by), Da-Luz-Moreira, Paulo (Contribution by), Santos, Vivaldo A (Contribution by), Anderson, Robert (Contribution by), Valente, Luiz Fernando (Contribution by), Higa, Mário (Contribution by), Hertzman, Marc A (Contribution by), Gúzman-González, Talia (Contribution by), Aidoo, LaMonte (Editor), Silva, Daniel F (Editor)

ISBN: 9780739176122

Publisher: Lexington Books

Hardcover
$135.00
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Pub Date: November 14, 2013

Dewey: 869.3

LCCN: 2013035502

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 9.10" L x 6.10" W ( 1.05 lbs) 248 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This is the first volume of critical essays in English on the much-studied Lima Barreto. Each chapter explores not only his life and vast body of work but also the historical and societal conditions in which his literary voice emerged.

Review Quotes:

"Comprising 12 essays on Brazilian writer Afonso Henriques de Lima Barreto (1881-1921), this volume opens with an introduction by Aidoo and Silva. In a translated essay on agency, literature, and madness, social anthropologist Lilia Moritz Schwarcz sets the parameters for understanding Lima Barreto's role as both leading author of his day and marginalized, bitter critic of poverty, race, social hierarchy, and politics. Other essays place Lima Barreto, who was troubled by alcoholism and mental illness, in a pan-American context through comparisons with North American literature (essays by Earl Fitz and Renata Wasserman); foreground him as a spokesman against endo-colonialist structures (Nelson Vieira, Vivaldo Santos, Emanuelle K. F. Oliveira); and question his dual position as educated critic and victim of racism (Marc Hertzman, Mário Higa). Luiz Fernando Valente studies Lima Barreto's famous parody of patriotism, and Paulo da-Luz-Moreira considers his humor in the story 'The Man Who Spoke Javanese' against farces by Machado de Assis and Monteiro Lobato. . . .Summing Up: Recommended." --Choice Reviews

"Lima Barreto's fiction, journalism, and diaries, as well as his personal and professional trajectories, remain a powerful challenge to most canonical interpretations of Brazilian race relations and national identity. This collection of critical essays achieves the important task of gathering a number of respected scholars from different regions and disciplines to offer a variety of highly innovative readings of his works, as well as rigorous analyses of life in early 20th-century Brazil. It offers an invaluable contribution to the fields of comparative literature, hemispheric studies, African diaspora, gender and race studies, and Decolonial thinking. It will certainly become an essential resource for both the specialist and those looking for an informed introduction to Brazilian culture." --Cesar Braga-Pinto, associate professor, Brazilian studies, Northwestern University

"Bringing together original and intelligent essays across several disciplines, this well-timed anthology is the first book-length English publication to pay homage to one of the major Afro-Brazilian intellectuals of all time: Afonso Henriques de Lima Barreto (1881-1922). As both a victim and an outspoken critic of elite Brazilians' racist backlash in the immediate aftermath of the Abolition of Slavery (1888), Lima Barreto, as demonstrated in these essays, left behind in his relatively short life a remarkable body of testimonies about the contradictions inherent in Brazil's official entrance into modernity. Above all, the essays in this collection ably address the ideological contradictions and cross-social/racial tensions in a society struggling to reconcile modernity with the cultural legacy of slavery and colonialism. As argued by the organizers of this important anthology, Lima Barreto's fierce opposition to the conciliatory ideologies of miscegenation and related cross-racial brotherhood still reverberates through the discourse and activism of contemporary Afro-Brazilians, and confirms the relevance of studying his work today." --Sonia Roncador, associate professor, Brazilian literature and culture, The University of Texas at Austin

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