
Misplaced Ideas
Essays on Brazilian Culture
Roberto Schwarz(Author)
John Gledson(Editor)
Verso Books (Publisher)
Published on 17. September 1992
Book
Paperback/Softback
230 pages
978-0-86091-576-8 (ISBN)
Description
How can Latin Americans understand their past? Do ideologies which have been imported from Europe necessarily distort their view, or is that to underrate the power and objectivity of the ideas themselves? These questions are at the heart of this selection of essays, spanning twenty years of critical work on history, culture and identity, by one of the foremost Latin American intellectuals of our time. Roberto Schwarz's writings have had a profound effect throughout Latin America. This is the first volume of those writings to appear in English.
Taking its title from what has probably been Schwarz's most influential essay, Misplaced Ideas first examines the slave-owning Brazil of the nineteenth century, to show the persistent gap between liberal ideology based on the free market, and the reality of forced labour. The essays which follow range across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and across film and fiction, theatre and music. They include four pieces on the great novelist Machado de Assis, and a powerful essay on the sometimes bizarre ways Brazilian culture reacted to the imposition of military rule. Throughout, Schwarz continually demonstrates the wit and sharpness which make his writings both a challenge and a pleasure to read.
Taking its title from what has probably been Schwarz's most influential essay, Misplaced Ideas first examines the slave-owning Brazil of the nineteenth century, to show the persistent gap between liberal ideology based on the free market, and the reality of forced labour. The essays which follow range across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and across film and fiction, theatre and music. They include four pieces on the great novelist Machado de Assis, and a powerful essay on the sometimes bizarre ways Brazilian culture reacted to the imposition of military rule. Throughout, Schwarz continually demonstrates the wit and sharpness which make his writings both a challenge and a pleasure to read.
Reviews / Votes
Roberto Schwarz's essays are not only a brilliant analysis of Brazilian literature and art, but above all a bold, original and creative contribution to a critical theory of literature, to a materialist interpretation of cultural history -- Michael LowyMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 232 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
348 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-86091-576-8 (9780860915768)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition
Book
07/1992
Verso Books
€63.33
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Persons
Roberto Schwarz, born in Vienna in 1938, grew up in Sao Paulo, studying there and later in the United States and France. His books in English include Two Girls, Misplaced Ideas: Essays on Brazilian Culture and A Master on the Periphery of Capitalism, the central component of his study of Machado.
Content
Brazilian culture - nationalism by elimination; misplaced ideas - literature and society in late-19th-century Brazil; beware of alien ideologies; the importing of the novel to Brazil and its contradictions in the work of Alencar; Machado de Assis - a biographical sketch; complex, modern, national and negative; the poor woman and her portraitist; "Who Can Tell Me That This Character is Not Brazil?"; the cart, the tram and the modernist poet; culture and politics in Brazil, 1964-1969; cinema and "The Guns"; on "A Man Marked Out To Die"; is there a Third World aesthetic?; Anatol Rosenfeld, a foreign intellectual; a historic landmark; Chico Buarque's new novel.