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Castro Alves

 
Biography: Antônio de Castro Alves

Antônio de Castro Alves (1847-1871) was the last of the prominent romantic poets of Brazil. He is best known for his poetic campaign in behalf of freedom for African slaves.

Antônio de Castro Alves was born in Curralinho (now Castro Alves) in the coastal province of Bahia on March 14, 1847, the son of a doctor. After receiving the best secondary education available, Antônio entered law school. He had begun to compose poetry even earlier and wrote some of his most impressive poems while a student. A hunting accident led to the amputation of a foot, and he dropped out of school. After 9 months of wandering through the backwoods of Brazil, he settled to write in the city of Salvador. He died of tuberculosis there at the age of 24 on July 6, 1871. Only one book of his poems, Espumas flutuantes (1870), was published before his death, but others were issued posthumously.

Some of the poetry of Castro Alves suffers from the worst qualities of 19th-century sentimentalism. Its exaggerated rhetorical quality reflects the Brazilian penchant for oratory and declamation. But, if some of his worst poems are omitted and some of the others are edited, his work emerges as highly lyrical yet restrained by a disciplined from (for example, O gondoleiro do amôr). His images are often powerful and deeply moving, as in Crepúsculo sertanejo. And even the declamatory tendency of his poetry indicates the degree to which it was rooted in the social and historical context.

Like most romantics Castro Alves saw the drama of man's destiny as an eternal conflict between good and evil. Man is caught by the maladjustments of history, and it was in this way that Castro Alves approached the problem of human slavery. Sinister forces larger than the individual had produced this institution, but Promethean struggle could perhaps destroy it or at least redeem the individual crushed between the grinding forces that produced it.

When Castro Alves was in law school, the issue of slavery was foremost in the public eye. Although the problem was not resolved for many years, law dealing with that institution were being hotly debated. And it was into this discussion that Castro Alves threw himself. Perhaps his most frequently recited poem is O navio negreiro, an account of the African slave trade in epic proportions. In many of his other poems, for instance, in the collection Vozes d' Africa (1880; Voices of Africa), he pictured the African not only as a hero but also as a lover, a truly human figure. To be sure, Castro Alves did not escape his times: he endowed his Africans with "white" qualities, even altering their physiognomy. But by this very means he was able to persuade some whites that, indeed, Africans were like them in love, in sorrow, in anger, and in tenderness; therefore, why not in law?

Further Reading

There is no book on Castro Alves in English, although some attention is given to him by Samuel Putnam in Marvelous Journey: A Survey of Four Centuries of Brazilian Writing (1948). The major study in Portuguese is Eugênio Gomes, ed., Castro Alves: Obra completa (1960).

Additional Sources

Oliveira, Valdemar de, Castro Alves, Recife: Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Editora Universitaria, 1979.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Antônio de Castro Alves
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Alves, Antônio de Castro (əntô'nyʊ dĭ käs'trʊ äl'vəs), 1847-71, Brazilian poet. A disciple of Victor Hugo, he came to fame with Espumas flutuantes [tossing spume] (1871). Despite a wild bohemian lifestyle, he was intensely nationalist and socially conscious. His best-known work, O navio negreiro [the slave ship], was instrumental in the abolition of slavery in Brazil and earned him the reputation as the "poet of the slaves."
Wikipedia: Castro Alves
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Antônio de Castro Alves

Born March 14, 1847(1847-03-14)
Cachoeira, Bahia, Brazil
Died July 6, 1871 (aged 24)
Salvador, Brazil
Pen name Castro Alves
Occupation Poet
Nationality Brazilian
Literary movement Romanticism

Antônio Frederico de Castro Alves (March 14, 1847 – July 6, 1871), more commonly known as Castro Alves (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈkastɾʊ ˈawvɪs]), was a Brazilian poet best remembered for his abolitionist and republican poems, and is considered one of the most important Brazilian poets of the 19th century.[1]

Contents

Life

Alves was born in the town of Cachoeira, Bahia, Brazil. In 1862, he entered the Faculdade de Direito do Recife, was involved in an affair with Portuguese actress Eugênia Câmara and wrote his first abolitionist poems: "Os Escravos" (The Slaves) and "A Cachoeira de Paulo Afonso" (Paulo Afonso's Waterfall), reading them out loud in public events in defense of the abolitionist cause. Even though many Brazilians stood up against it at that time, slavery in Brazil was not officially ended until 1888, when Princess Isabel, daughter of Dom Pedro II, declared it extinct by means of the Lei Áurea (Golden Law).

In 1867, Alves left Recife and returned Bahia, where he wrote his dramatic play "Gonzaga". He later moved to Rio de Janeiro, where he met influential people such as José de Alencar, Francisco Otaviano and Machado de Assis, from whom he got moral support.

Alves headed south to São Paulo to take courses at Sao Francisco Law School. While there he met important writers and politicians, such as Rui Barbosa, Joaquim Nabuco, Rodrigues Alves, Afonso Pena and Bias Fortes. On November 11, 1868, while hunting in the surroundings of São Paulo, he was shot in the left ankle, which led to the amputation of his feet. Soon afterwards Alves contracted tuberculosis, a very common disease in São Paulo at that time due to the dark and untidy pubs around town and chilly weather, which forced him to return to his home land, Bahia. He died on July 6, 1871, in the city of Salvador.

Poetry

Alves's work stands in the late-Romantic aesthetic and is deeply influenced by the work of the French poet Victor Hugo in a movement called condoreirismo, which is marked by the introspection of the Romantic period with a social and humanitarian concern. These concerns led him to the incipient Abolitionism and Republicanism, of whose causes he was one of the foremost representatives.

His poetry is more optimistic in tone than early romantic poets, and is marked by more sensual and physical images than is usual to the Romantic Aesthetic. He was not attached to the (sometimes official) indigenism shown by José de Alencar or Gonçalves Dias, nor had the mal-du-siècle aesthetic of Álvares de Azevedo. As a result of this, his work is usually considered to be late-romantic, tending to the later Realist movement.

Among his best known works are: "Espumas Flutuantes" (Floating Foams), "Gonzaga ou A Revolução de Minas" (Gonzaga or the Revolution of Minas), "Cachoeira de Paulo Afonso", "Vozes D'África" (Voices from Africa), "O Navio Negreiro" (The Slave Ship).

References and notes

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