Description
Book SynopsisThis is an extraordinarily imaginative attempt to analyze the relations between literature and technique in Brazil from the 1880''s to the 1920''s. The author suggests that in these relations we can see more clearly the shape of a period that is otherwise usually defined from a literary perspective as pre- or post- something or other, rather than in terms of its own characteristics. One such characteristic is the intense interaction with the new technologies then arising in Brazil, the beginning of the professionalization of writers, and a revision of the concept of literature, redefined as technique.
The author''s chief concern is to determine what is distinctive about the literary production of the period. Rather than focusing on literature''s relations with visual art, with a rising social class, or with the sociopolitical divisions within the educated classes of Brazilian society, the author examines the crônica (a kind of journalistic essay), poetry, and fic
Trade Review
"This is a stimulating little book, full of subtle and nuanced argument and of suggestive insights. . . . This survey seems to me to be indispensable as an approach to Brazilian literature of the period."—Modern Language Review
Table of Contents
1. In place of an epigraph 2. The hand and the machine 3. The traces of technology 4. Literary technique 5. Typing away Notes Bibliography Index.