Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955

Taking Oswald de Andrade’s 1928 “Manifesto antropófago” [Cannibalist Manifesto] as a point of departure, this article analyzes how zombies in Brazilian literature from 1900 to 1955 represent a kind of cultural cannibalism, consuming bodies as a way of resisting hegemonic power, oblivion and marginal...

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Main Author: M. Elizabeth Ginway
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of South Florida 2018-12-01
Series:Alambique
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/alambique/vol6/iss1/7
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spelling doaj-0311d7820ec448e2a176326bc4160b042020-11-25T02:27:41ZengUniversity of South FloridaAlambique2167-65772167-65772018-12-016111410.5038/2167-6577.6.1.7Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955M. Elizabeth Ginway0University of FloridaTaking Oswald de Andrade’s 1928 “Manifesto antropófago” [Cannibalist Manifesto] as a point of departure, this article analyzes how zombies in Brazilian literature from 1900 to 1955 represent a kind of cultural cannibalism, consuming bodies as a way of resisting hegemonic power, oblivion and marginalization. Zombies variously represent rural inhabitants, modern consumers, prostitutes and hustlers who often become invisible, faceless, and voiceless, symbolizing the historical silencing of subalterns or “cannibals.” Several Brazilian short stories and legends from the first half of the twentieth century serve to illustrate the cultural cannibalism of the proto-zombie: Lima Barreto’s “A Nova Califórnia” (1910), Monteiro Lobato’s “Café, café” (1900), Murilo Rubião’s “O pirotécnico Zacarias” (1943), Carlos Drummond de Andrade’s “Flor, moça, telefone” (1951), Gilberto Freyre’s “Boca-de-ouro” (1955) and its re-interpretation in comic-book form by Roberta Cirne. Written by canonical authors, these stories have traditionally been considered to be parables condemning greed, horror or madness, yet if we examine them more closely, we discover that they involve the living dead and the contagion characteristic of zombies. I argue that Brazil’s proto-zombies represent these groups’ resistance to collective oblivion as they fall victim to the transition from a rural, agricultural-based economy to an urban consumer society.https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/alambique/vol6/iss1/7 Brazilliterary zombieseconomic crisistwentieth century
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Elizabeth Ginway
spellingShingle M. Elizabeth Ginway
Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
Alambique
Brazil
literary zombies
economic crisis
twentieth century
author_facet M. Elizabeth Ginway
author_sort M. Elizabeth Ginway
title Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
title_short Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
title_full Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
title_fullStr Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
title_full_unstemmed Eating the Past: Proto-Zombies in Brazilian Fiction 1900-1955
title_sort eating the past: proto-zombies in brazilian fiction 1900-1955
publisher University of South Florida
series Alambique
issn 2167-6577
2167-6577
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Taking Oswald de Andrade’s 1928 “Manifesto antropófago” [Cannibalist Manifesto] as a point of departure, this article analyzes how zombies in Brazilian literature from 1900 to 1955 represent a kind of cultural cannibalism, consuming bodies as a way of resisting hegemonic power, oblivion and marginalization. Zombies variously represent rural inhabitants, modern consumers, prostitutes and hustlers who often become invisible, faceless, and voiceless, symbolizing the historical silencing of subalterns or “cannibals.” Several Brazilian short stories and legends from the first half of the twentieth century serve to illustrate the cultural cannibalism of the proto-zombie: Lima Barreto’s “A Nova Califórnia” (1910), Monteiro Lobato’s “Café, café” (1900), Murilo Rubião’s “O pirotécnico Zacarias” (1943), Carlos Drummond de Andrade’s “Flor, moça, telefone” (1951), Gilberto Freyre’s “Boca-de-ouro” (1955) and its re-interpretation in comic-book form by Roberta Cirne. Written by canonical authors, these stories have traditionally been considered to be parables condemning greed, horror or madness, yet if we examine them more closely, we discover that they involve the living dead and the contagion characteristic of zombies. I argue that Brazil’s proto-zombies represent these groups’ resistance to collective oblivion as they fall victim to the transition from a rural, agricultural-based economy to an urban consumer society.
topic Brazil
literary zombies
economic crisis
twentieth century
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/alambique/vol6/iss1/7
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