The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis
On a recent trip to Brazil, Salman Rushdie confessed his appreciation of the workd of Machado de Assis. Similarly, on the occasion of the release of his film, Matchpoint, Woody Allen expressed his admiration for the author of Dom Casmurro. Cultural supplements in newspapers and magazines have enthusiastically reprinted these encomiums for the author of The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas. Is it possible that a "master on the periphery of capitalism"—to use Roberto Schwarz's expression—can achieve full recognition in the "world republic of letters"—as Pascale Casanova calls the structure of the international literary marketplace? Casanova provides the answer: "Notwithstanding ecumenical ideology that presides over literary celebrations, writers in small languages are apt to find themselves marginalized."

New readings of Machado's work come to the fore when we discuss his legacy in a broader context. Therefore, we should emphasize the circumstances of an author who boldly experimented with literary genres, freely appropriated the literary tradition, developed an irreverent rapport with the reader through a series of experiments with the narrative voice, attributed to the act of reading a central role in the act of writing, and played with the process of rewriting the text as the text is being written through the act of ironically commenting on the process of composition. Machado de Assis is a very provocative writer, regardless of his geographical coordinates. Indeed, Machado seems to write (also) in order to think about literature. He narrates in order to propose narrative problems; his oeuvre thus embodies a form whose content is the problematization of literature itself, its conditions of readability and the status of interpretation in the age of the printing press. As soon as we bring questions such as these to the fore we see a new Machado de Assis appear, one who is a precursor of Jorge Luis Borges; a precursor to that family of authors who always knew that writing is a byproduct of reading.
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The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis
On a recent trip to Brazil, Salman Rushdie confessed his appreciation of the workd of Machado de Assis. Similarly, on the occasion of the release of his film, Matchpoint, Woody Allen expressed his admiration for the author of Dom Casmurro. Cultural supplements in newspapers and magazines have enthusiastically reprinted these encomiums for the author of The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas. Is it possible that a "master on the periphery of capitalism"—to use Roberto Schwarz's expression—can achieve full recognition in the "world republic of letters"—as Pascale Casanova calls the structure of the international literary marketplace? Casanova provides the answer: "Notwithstanding ecumenical ideology that presides over literary celebrations, writers in small languages are apt to find themselves marginalized."

New readings of Machado's work come to the fore when we discuss his legacy in a broader context. Therefore, we should emphasize the circumstances of an author who boldly experimented with literary genres, freely appropriated the literary tradition, developed an irreverent rapport with the reader through a series of experiments with the narrative voice, attributed to the act of reading a central role in the act of writing, and played with the process of rewriting the text as the text is being written through the act of ironically commenting on the process of composition. Machado de Assis is a very provocative writer, regardless of his geographical coordinates. Indeed, Machado seems to write (also) in order to think about literature. He narrates in order to propose narrative problems; his oeuvre thus embodies a form whose content is the problematization of literature itself, its conditions of readability and the status of interpretation in the age of the printing press. As soon as we bring questions such as these to the fore we see a new Machado de Assis appear, one who is a precursor of Jorge Luis Borges; a precursor to that family of authors who always knew that writing is a byproduct of reading.
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The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis

The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis

by João Cezar De Castro Rocha (Editor)
The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis

The Author as Plagiarist -- The Case of Machado de Assis

by João Cezar De Castro Rocha (Editor)

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

On a recent trip to Brazil, Salman Rushdie confessed his appreciation of the workd of Machado de Assis. Similarly, on the occasion of the release of his film, Matchpoint, Woody Allen expressed his admiration for the author of Dom Casmurro. Cultural supplements in newspapers and magazines have enthusiastically reprinted these encomiums for the author of The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas. Is it possible that a "master on the periphery of capitalism"—to use Roberto Schwarz's expression—can achieve full recognition in the "world republic of letters"—as Pascale Casanova calls the structure of the international literary marketplace? Casanova provides the answer: "Notwithstanding ecumenical ideology that presides over literary celebrations, writers in small languages are apt to find themselves marginalized."

New readings of Machado's work come to the fore when we discuss his legacy in a broader context. Therefore, we should emphasize the circumstances of an author who boldly experimented with literary genres, freely appropriated the literary tradition, developed an irreverent rapport with the reader through a series of experiments with the narrative voice, attributed to the act of reading a central role in the act of writing, and played with the process of rewriting the text as the text is being written through the act of ironically commenting on the process of composition. Machado de Assis is a very provocative writer, regardless of his geographical coordinates. Indeed, Machado seems to write (also) in order to think about literature. He narrates in order to propose narrative problems; his oeuvre thus embodies a form whose content is the problematization of literature itself, its conditions of readability and the status of interpretation in the age of the printing press. As soon as we bring questions such as these to the fore we see a new Machado de Assis appear, one who is a precursor of Jorge Luis Borges; a precursor to that family of authors who always knew that writing is a byproduct of reading.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781933227108
Publisher: Tagus Press
Publication date: 01/01/2005
Series: Portuguese Literary and Cultural Studies
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 672
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.60(d)

About the Author

JOÃO CEZAR DE CASTRO ROCHA is Professor of Comparative Literature at the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ) and Researcher at the Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa Científica (CNPq). He is author of Literatura e cordialidade. O público e o privado na cultura brasileira (EdUERJ, 1998), and O elio do homem cordial. Ensaios e revisões (Museu da República, 2004).

Table of Contents

Introduction: Machado de Assis—The Location of an Author — João Cezar de Castro Rocha
ACTS OF READING
Machado de Assis' Reception and the Transformation of the Modern European Novel — Earl E. Fitz
Dress and Female Intelligence: Intertextuality in Esau and Jacob — Pedro Armando de Almeida Magalhães
Readings of Balzac in Twentieth-Century Brazil: The Case of Machado de Assis — Gilberto Pinheiro Passos
The Shandean Form: Laurence Sterne and Machado de Assis — Sergio Paulo Rouanet
Machado de Assis, Critic of Eça de Queirós—A Symptomatic Misunderstanding — João Camilo dos Santos
Hamlet the Brazilian Way (Machado, Reader of Shakespeare) — Sandra Guardini T. Vasconcelos
INTERPRETATIONS
Machado de Assis, a Contemporary Writer — João Almino
Machado and Modernism — Raúl Antelo
Machado de Assis on Popular Music: A Case for Cultural Studies in Nineteenth-Century Latin America — Idelber Avelar
Raymundo Faoro, Reader of Machado de Assis — Alfredo Bosi
Around My Room and Around Life — Antonio Candido
Fictionalizations of the Reader in Machado de Assis' Novels — Hélio de Seixas Guimarães
The Cannibal Metaphor in Machado de Assis — K. David Jackson
The Skeptical Paradox in Machado de Assis — Gustavo Bernardo Krause
Machado and the Cost of Reading — Marisa Lajolo and Regina Zilberman
The Development of a Skeptical Life—View in the Fiction of Machado de Assis — José Raimundo Maia Neto
The Place of Machado de Assis in the Present — Daniel Piza
Machado de Assis: A Keen Look at Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Identity — Maria Aparecida Ferreira de Andrade Salgueiro
Master among the Ruins — Michael Wood
NOVEL
The Beautiful Form of Sadness: Machado de Assis' Memorial de Aires — Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
Four Stomachs and a Brain: An Interpretation of Esaú e Jacó — Stephen M. Hart
How is the Second Life of Brás Cubas Different from His First One? — Victor J. Mendes
Absence of Time: The Counselor's Dreams — Pedro Meira Monteiro
The (Lack of) Feeling of What Happens: Machado de Assis' Dom Casmurro — Karl Ludwig Pfeiffer
Irony in Machado de Assis' Dom Casmurro: Reflections on Anti-Tragic Cordiality — Kathrin H. Rosenfield
Strategies of Deceit: Dom Casmurro — Marta de Senna
Some Unknown Chapters of the First Version of Quincas Borba Serialized in A Estação — Ana Cláudia Suriani da Silva
Sentimental Commerce and Moral Accountancy in Memórias póstumas de Brás Cubas — Bluma Waddington Vilar
Picturing Machado de Assis
SHORT STORY
The Paradox of the Alienist — Abel Barros Baptista
Under the Guise of Science — Ivo Barbieri
Paradigms at Play: The Short Stories of Machado de Assis — Paul Dixon
The Short Story in the Works of Machado de Assis and Horacio Quiroga: A Material Aesthetic? — Pablo Rocca
“Rosebud” and the Holy Grail: A Hypothesis for Re-Reading Machado de Assis' Short Stories — João Cezar de Castro Rocha
POETRY / Crônica / JOURNALISM
Machado de Assis, the Apprentice Journalist — Cristiane Costa
Machado de Assis and Nationalism: The Americanas Case — José Luís Jobim
The Poetry of Machado de Assis — Cláudio Murilo Leal
Crônica in Fifteen Themes — Ana Miranda
Quincas Borba in A Estação — Marcus Vinicius Nogueira Soares
RECEPTION
A Season in Casa Verde — Alfred MacAdam
Machado de Assis in English: A Selected Bibliography — K. David Jackson
Machado de Assis — José Saramago
Machado de Assis in Portugal — Arnaldo Saraiva
TRANSLATORS

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