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2016, RIHA Journal
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1. [1] In this special issue you will find a discussion on southern modernisms stemming from an exploratory research project funded by the Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT) between 2014 and 2015.1 As a project, southern modernisms had a theoretical and historiographical focus driven to discuss the resonances of the two words associated in its title, as well as the disquieting effect of their combination in the fields of visual arts and architecture. The first word – modernisms – stood against the standardized canon of modernism, thus bonding the research to the critical revision of that concept occurring in art history since the closing decades of the 20th century;2 the second word based the project in southern Europe, meaning that Portugal, Spain, Italy and Greece would set the ground for selecting case studies.
The Living Commons Collective Magazine, 2023
Throughout a 2-day symposium, the Brazilian modernist project was examined through a critical perspective by considering the canonical character of modernism in its expression in São Paulo and Southeastern Brazil in the country’s literary historiography, the exclusion of other regional expressions, the relationship of modernism with racial discourses and institutional aspects of Brazil and its peoples. How is it possible to think about Brazilian modernity based on productions from other regions outside the hegemony of the Southeast? In what ways has modernism contributed and contributes to the discourses of racism and machismo in Brazil? What links can be found between the discourses of modernism and social structures of power and hegemony in the country? What potentials did modernism open up and was unable to realize, and how could its limitations and possibilities be rescued, thought, and critically practiced? The symposium, held at UC Irvine in May 2022, brought together artists and academics who engaged with the proposed questions, among many others, through a deep critical engagement with Brazilian literature, popular aesthetic practices, philosophy, established artistic production, and social-political-economic issues. Through its multidisciplinary approach, we hope that these and other lines of inquiry become available for the ongoing project of reviewing and rethinking modes of domination, especially in Brazil, in order to arrive at justice.
Legenda, 2011
For a more encompassing and stimulating picture of Modernism – seen as a movement of the 20th century, a broad spectrum of work across many countries – we must explore not only its external diversity but also its internal plurality. Portuguese Modernism manifested itself both in visual art and in literature. But at the same time it is important to acknowledge the centrality of Modernism’s contribution to this time of profound cultural change. Indeed, the socio-cultural transformations marking the early twentieth century in Portugal still endure today. This volume provides a critical guide for students and teachers, contributed by an array of scholars with unparalleled knowledge of the period, its artists and its writers. www.mhra.org.uk/publications/Portuguese-Modernisms http://www.mhra.org.uk/publications/Portuguese-Modernisms Portuguese Modernisms Multiple Perspectives on Literature and the Visual Arts Edited by Steffen Dix and Jerónimo Pizarro LEGENDA (GENERAL SERIES) Legenda, 4 February 2011 • 406pp ISBN: 978-1-906540-79-1 (hardback) ----- ISBN 9780367602918 (paperback) Published June 30, 2020 by Routledge 406 Pages ----- ISBN 9781906540791 (hardback) Published December 10, 2010 by Routledge 406 Pages ----- ebook ISBN 9781315089607 Published July 5, 2017 by Routledge 406 Pages Google Books https://books.google.pt/books/about/Portuguese_Modernisms.html?id=NgWDRAAACAAJ&redir_esc=y Table of Contents Indroduction Main Figures and Magazines 1. Portuguese Precursors of the First Modernist Generation 2. Fernando Pessoa: Not One but Multiple isms 3. Mário de Sá-Carneiro: Modernism Achieved by Means of Wrong Beauty 4. Lisbon Stories: The Dialogue between Word and Image in the Work of Jose de Almada Negreiros 5. José de Almada Negreiros: Modernism in the Visual Arts 6. Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso: A Modernist Painter 7. António Botto’s Impossible Queerness of Being 8. Modernist Differences: Judith Teixeira and Florbela Espanca 9. Antonio Ferro: Modernism and Politics 10. How the First Portuguese Modernism Became Public: From Orpheu to Athena 11. The Presença Generation 12. Vieira da Silva: The Visible and the Gap 13. The Formation of a Modernist Tradition in Contemporary Portuguese Poetry Historical and Comparative Perspectives 14. The Continuum of Modernism in the Iberian Peninsula, 1890-1936 15. Portuguese Modernism, Brazilian Modernism 16. The Reception of Futurism in Portugal 17. Modernist Confluences: Comparative Perspectives on Portuguese Modernism 18. The Tail of the Lizard: Pessoan Disquietude and the Subject of Modernity 19. Ezra Pound and Fernando Pessoa with T. S. Eliot in-between 20. A Scattering of Shards: The Fragmentation of the Subject in the Orpheu Generation 21. Modernist Theatre in the First Two Decades of the Twentieth Century 22. The Aesthetics of Nationalism: Modernism and Authoritarianism in Early Twentieth-Century Portugal 23. Spiritualism and Poetry in Modernist Portugal 24. Important Literary Works of Portuguese Modernism
For a more encompassing and stimulating picture of Modernism – seen as a movement of the 20th century, a broad spectrum of work across many countries – we must explore not only its external diversity but also its internal plurality. Portuguese Modernism manifested itself both in visual art and in literature. But at the same time it is important to acknowledge the centrality of Modernism’s contribution to this time of profound cultural change. Indeed, the socio-cultural transformations marking the early twentieth century in Portugal still endure today. This volume provides a critical guide for students and teachers, contributed by an array of scholars with unparalleled knowledge of the period, its artists and its writers.
Journal of Architectural Education, 2009
This article discusses the term ‘Quiet Modernism’, coined by José-Augusto França (arguably the most relevant Portuguese art historian of the 20th century) in relation to the work of two Portuguese architects from the first half of the 20th century, Carlos and Guilherme Rebelo de Andrade, to whom the term originally related. Although the historian used the term only once in a major study about 19th century art, here it is discussed in relation to his broader notions of ‘Modernism’, ‘Modernity’, ‘Modern’ and ‘Equivocal Modernism’, implying that the term ‘Quiet Modernism’ seems to jeopardize the perceived reading of his interpretation of traditionalism, regionalisms and nationalist references in architecture as pejorative. Also, I focus my analysis on the relationship between Nationalism and history, in the context of Portuguese history of art and architecture, and the broader frame of the antithetical discourse of Modernism master narrative. I do this in order to highlight the relevance the term ‘Quiet Modernism’ seems to have, at the dawn of the authoritarian regime of the Salazar dictatorship, as a notion that might serve to draw a distinction between a propagandist use of Modernist architecture and a broader notion of Modernism.
Third World Modernism: Architecture, Development, and Identity, ed. Duanfang Lu (Routledge), 2010
The study of Brazilian modernism often conjures up a litany repeated by historians and critics. Modernist ideas were allegedly an import from Europe, "out of place" with relation to Brazil's sociopolitical and material realities. 1 These ideas lacked some crucial or essential precondition, producing a paradoxical "modernism without modernity." 2 Brazilian modernism was out of time, lopsided, proposing forms and designs "well ahead of economic and technological realities." 3 It supposedly put the cart before the horse, introducing concepts and proposals that anticipated rather than expressed modernity and modernization. The implication is that modernism in Brazil was derivative, imitative, and subordinate to European modernism, and as such was doubly inauthentic: it neither expressed "genuine" Brazilian experiences, nor did it live up to the "original" European models.
Pessoa Plural―A Journal of Fernando Pessoa Studies, 2017
DIX, Steffen; SILVA, Patrícia, "Introductory note—the emergence of Portuguese modernism: contributions to its cultural history" (2017). Pessoa Plural―A Journal of Fernando Pessoa Studies, No. 11, Spring, pp. 1-8. Brown Digital Repository. Brown University Library. https://doi.org/10.7301/Z0GT5KCJ Is Part of: Pessoa Plural―A Journal of Fernando Pessoa Studies, Issue 11 Introductory Note [Nota Introdutória] https://doi.org/10.7301/Z0GT5KCJ BIBLIOGRAPHY Bibliography / 1 BENJAMIN, Walter (1963). Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit. Frankfurt am Main: Edition Suhrkamp. BROOKER, Peter and Andrew THACKER (2005) (eds.). Geographies of Modernism: Literature, Culture, Spaces. Abingdon; New York: Routledge. DIX, Steffen and Jerónimo PIZARRO (2011). Portuguese Modernisms: Multiple Perspectives on Literature and the Visual Arts. Oxford: Legenda. FRIEDMAN, Susan Stanford (2015). Planetary Modernisms: Provocations on Modernity Across Time. N.Y.; Chischester, West Sussex: Columbia UP. _____ (2010). “Planetarity: Musing Modernist Studies”, in Modernism/modernity, vol. 17, n.º 3, September, pp. 471-‐‑499. _____ (2008). “One Hand Clapping: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and the Spatio/Temporal Boundaries of Modernism”, in Translocal Modernisms: International Perspectives. Edited by Maria Irene Ramalho and António Sousa Ribeiro. Bern; New York; Oxford; and others: Peter Lang, pp. 11-‐‑40. _____ (2006). “Periodizing Modernism: Postcolonial Modernities and the Space/Time Borders of Modernist Studies”, in Modernism/modernity, vol. 13, n.º 3, special issue, “Modernism and Transnationalisms”, pp. 425–443. HOBSBAWM, Eric (1995). The Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century, 1914–1991. London: Abacus. LAWRENCE, D. H. (1923; rpt. 1960). Kangaroo. New York: Viking. ROCHA, Clara (2013). “Modernist Magazines in Portugal: Orpheu and its Legacy: Orpheu (1915); Exílio (1916); Centauro (1916); Portugal Futurista (1917); Contemporânea (1915, 1922-‐‑6); Athena (1924-‐‑5); Sudoeste (1935); Presença (1927–38, 1939-‐‑40 [1977]“, in The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines. Edited by Peter Brooker, Andrew Thacker, Sascha Bru, and Christian Weikop. Oxford: Oxford UP, vol. III, “Europe 1880-‐‑1940“, pp. 413-‐‑435. STEINMETZ, Sebald Rudolf (1912/1913). “Die Stellung der Soziographie in der Reihe der Geisteswissenschaften“, in Archiv für Rechts-‐‑ und Wirtschaftsphilosophie, vol. 6, n.º 3, pp. 492-‐‑ 501. WOOLF, Virginia (1966). Collected Essays. London: The Hogarth Press, vol. I. Bibliography / 2 Most recent publications about Orpheu CARDIELLO, Antonio, Jeronimo PIZARRO, and Sílvia Laureano COSTA (2015) (eds.). Nós, os de "ʺOrpheu"ʺ | We, the "ʺOpheu"ʺ lot. Lisboa: Boca – Palavras que Alimentam. DIX, Steffen (2015) (ed.). 1915: o ano do Orpheu. Lisboa: Tinta-‐‑de-‐‑china. JÚDICE, Nuno (2015) (ed.). Colóquio/Letras, n.º 190, Setembro-‐‑Dezembro, “À Volta de Orpheu”. MAIOR, Dionísio Vila and Annabela RITA (2016) (eds.). 100 Orpheu. Viseu: Edições Esgotadas. MATANGRANO, Bruno Anselmi et.al (2015) (eds.). 100 Anos da Revista Orpheu. São Paulo: Revista Desassossego 14. MOISÉS, Carlos Felipe (ed.) (2015). Orpheu 1915-‐‑2015. Campinas: Unicamp. ORPHEU (2015). Fac-‐‑simile edition. Edited by Steffen Dix. Lisboa: Tinta-‐‑de-‐‑china. ORPHEU (2015). Fac-‐‑simile edition. Público. Lisboa. ORPHEU: revista de literatura (2015). Translated and edited by Ana Lucía De Bastos. Caracas: Bid & Co Editor. ORPHEU: revue trimestrielle de littérature (2015). Translated and edited by Patrick Quillier. Paris: Ypsilon Éditeur. PESSOA, Fernando (2015). Orpheu. Schriften zur Literatur: Ästhetik und Kunst. Translated and edited by Steffen Dix. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer-‐‑Verlage. _____ (2015). Sobre Orpheu e o Sensacionismo. Edited by Richard Zenith and Fernando Cabral Martins. Lisboa: Assírio & Alvim. _____ (2009). Sensacionismo e Outros Ismos. Edited by Jerónimo Pizarro. Critical edition. Lisboa: Imprensa Nacional-‐‑Casa da Moeda. SAMUEL, Paulo (2015) (ed.). Orpheu e o Modernismo Português. Porto: Fundação Engenheiro António de Almeida. SARAIVA, Arnaldo (2017). “O centenário e ‘inextinguível’ Orpheu”, in Colóquio/Letras, n.º 194, Janeiro-‐‑Abril, pp. 180-‐‑85. _____ (2015). Os Órfãos do Orpheu. Porto: Fundação Engenheiro António de Almeida. SEPÚLVEDA, Pedro (2015) (ed.). Caderno do Orpheu. Lisboa: Revista Estranhar Pessoa 2. SOUSA, Rui (2011). Os Bastidores de Orpheu: visões dos do grupo a respeito do seu tempo e do seu projecto, Lisboa: CLEPUL. ZENITH, Richard (2015) (ed.). Os Caminhos de Orpheu. Lisboa: Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal – Babel.
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