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Machado de Assis

Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis (Portuguese: [ʒwɐˈkĩ mɐˈɾi.ɐ mɐˈʃadu dʒ(i) ɐˈsis]), often known by his surnames as Machado de Assis, Machado, or Bruxo do Cosme Velho[1] (21 June 1839 – 29 September 1908), was a pioneer Brazilian novelist, poet, playwright and short story writer, widely regarded as the greatest writer of Brazilian literature.[2][3][4] In 1897, he founded and became the first President of the Brazilian Academy of Letters. He was multilingual, having taught himself French, English, German and Greek later in life.

Machado de Assis
Picture by Marc Ferrez, c. 1880
1st Academic of the 23rd chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters
In office
28 January 1897 – 29 September 1908
Preceded byPosition established
José de Alencar (patron)
Succeeded byLafayette Rodrigues Pereira
President of the Brazilian Academy of Letters
In office
28 January 1897 – 29 September 1908
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byRuy Barbosa
Personal details
Born
Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis

(1839-06-21)21 June 1839
Rio de Janeiro, Empire of Brazil
Died29 September 1908(1908-09-29) (aged 69)
Rio de Janeiro, First Brazilian Republic
Spouse
Carolina Augusta Xavier de Novais
(m. 1869; died 1904)
OccupationNovelist, short story writer, poet, literary critic
Period1864–1908
MovementRomanticism, Realism
Influences
Influenced
Other namesMachado, "The Warlock from Cosme Velho"
Signature

Born in Morro do Livramento [pt], Rio de Janeiro, from a poor family, he was the grandson of freed slaves in a country where slavery would not be fully abolished until 49 years later. He barely studied in public schools and never attended university. With only his own intellect and autodidactism to rely on, he struggled to rise socially. To do so, he took several public positions, passing through the Ministry of Agriculture, Trade and Public Works, and achieving early fame in newspapers where he first published his poetry and chronicles.

Machado's work shaped the realist movement in Brazil. He became known for his wit and his eye-opening critiques of society. Generally considered to be Machado's greatest works are Dom Casmurro (1899), Memórias Póstumas de Brás Cubas ("Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas", also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner) and Quincas Borba (also known in English as Philosopher or Dog?). In 1893 he published "A Missa do Galo" ("Midnight Mass"), often considered to be the greatest short story in Brazilian literature.[5]

Biography edit

Birth and adolescence edit

 
Morro do Livramento. The arrow in the top right corner shows the house where Machado was probably born and spent his childhood.

Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis was born on 21 June 1839 in Rio de Janeiro, then capital of the Empire of Brazil.[6][7][8] His parents were Francisco José de Assis, a wall painter, the son of freed slaves,[9] and Maria Leopoldina da Câmara Machado, a Portuguese washerwoman from the Azores.[7][10] He was born in Livramento country house, owned by Dona Maria José de Mendonça Barroso Pereira, widow of senator Bento Barroso Pereira, who protected his parents and allowed them to live with her.[6][7] Dona Maria José became Joaquim's godmother; her brother-in-law, commendator Joaquim Alberto de Sousa da Silveira, was his godfather, and both were paid homage by giving their names to the baby.[6][7] Machado had a sister who died young.[8] Joaquim studied in a public school, but was not a good student.[6] While helping to serve masses, he met Father Silveira Sarmento, who became his Latin teacher and also a good friend.[6][7]

When Joaquim was ten years old, his mother died, and his father took him along as he moved to São Cristóvão. Francisco de Assis met Maria Inês da Silva, and they married in 1854.[6][7][8] Joaquim had classes in a school for girls only, thanks to his stepmother who worked there making candies. At night he learned French with an immigrant baker.[6] In his adolescence, he met Francisco de Paulo Brito, who owned a bookstore, a newspaper and typography.[6] On 12 January 1855, Francisco de Paula published the poem Ela ("Her") written by Joaquim, then 15 years old, in the newspaper Marmota Fluminense.[6][7][8] In the following year, he was hired as typographer's apprentice in the Imprensa Oficial (the Official Press, charged with the publication of Government measures), where he was encouraged as a writer by Manuel Antônio de Almeida, the newspaper's director and also a novelist.[6] There he also met Francisco Otaviano, journalist and later liberal senator, and Quintino Bocaiúva, who decades later would become known for his role as a republican orator.[11]

Early career and education edit

 
National Press, c. 1880, where Machado de Assis began his services as typographer and reviser.

Francisco Otaviano hired Machado to work on the newspaper Correio Mercantil as a proofreader in 1858.[8][11] He continued to write for the Marmota Fluminense and also for several other newspapers, but he did not earn much and had a humble life.[8][11] As he did not live with his father anymore, it was common for him to eat only once a day for lack of money.[11]

Around this time, he became a friend of the writer and liberal politician José de Alencar, who taught him English. From English literature, he was influenced by Laurence Sterne, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron and Jonathan Swift. He learned German years later and in his old age, Greek.[11] He was invited by Bocaiúva to work at his newspaper Diário do Rio de Janeiro in 1860.[7][12] Machado had a passion for theater and wrote several plays for a short time; his friend Bocaiúva concluded: "Your works are meant to be read and not played."[12] He gained some notability and began to sign his writings as J. M. Machado de Assis, the way he would be known for posterity: Machado de Assis.[12] He established himself in advanced Liberal Party circles by taking stands in defense of religious freedom and Ernest Renan's controversial Life of Jesus while attacking the venality of the clergy.[13]

 
Machado de Assis when he was 25 years old, 1864.

His father Francisco de Assis died in 1864. Machado learned of his father's death through acquaintances. He dedicated his compilation of poems called "Crisálidas" to his father: "To the Memory of Francisco José de Assis and Maria Leopoldina Machado de Assis, my Parents."[14] With the Liberal Party's ascension to power about that time, Machado thought he might receive a patronage position that would help him improve his life. To his surprise, aid came from the Emperor Dom Pedro II, who hired him as director-assistant in the Diário Oficial in 1867, and knighted him as an honor.[14] In 1888 Machado was made an officer of the Order of the Rose.[8]

Marriage and family edit

In 1868 Machado met the Portuguese Carolina Augusta Xavier de Novais, five years older than he was.[14] She was the sister of his colleague Faustino Xavier de Novais, for whom he worked on the magazine O Futuro.[8][11] Machado had a stammer and was extremely shy, short and lean. He was also very intelligent and well learned.[14] He married Carolina on 12 November 1869; although her parents, Miguel and Adelaide, and her siblings disapproved because Machado was of African descent and she was a white woman.[7][14] They had no children.[15]

Literature edit

Machado managed to rise in his bureaucratic career, first in the Agriculture Department. Three years later, he became the head of a section in it.[7][16] He published two poetry books: Falenas, in 1870, and Americanas, in 1875.[16] Their weak reception made him explore other literary genres.

He wrote five romantic novels: Ressurreição, A Mão e a Luva, Helena and Iaiá Garcia.[16] The books were a success with the public, but literary critics considered them mediocre.[16] Machado suffered repeated attacks of epilepsy, apparently related to hearing of the death of his old friend José de Alencar. He was left melancholic, pessimistic and fixed on death.[17] His next book, marked by "a skeptical and realistic tone": Memórias Póstumas de Brás Cubas (Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas, also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner), is widely considered a masterpiece.[18] By the end of the 1880s, Machado had gained wide renown as a writer.[8]

Although he was opposed to slavery, he never spoke against it in public.[16][19] He avoided discussing politics.[18][19] He was criticized by the abolitionist José do Patrocínio and by the writer Lima Barreto for staying away from politics, especially the cause of abolition.[1][19] He was also criticized by them for having married a white woman.[1] Machado was caught by surprise with the monarchy overthrown on 15 November 1889.[18] Machado had no sympathy towards republicanism,[18] as he considered himself a liberal monarchist[20] and venerated Pedro II, whom he perceived as "a humble, honest, well-learned and patriotic man, who knew how to make of a throne a chair [for his simplicity], without diminishing its greatness and respect."[21] When a commission went to the public office where he worked to remove the picture of the former emperor, the shy Machado defied them: "The picture got in here by an order and it shall leave only by another order."[18]

The birth of the Brazilian republic made Machado become more critical and an observer of the Brazilian society of his time.[22] From then on, he wrote "not only the greatest novels of his time, but the greatest of all time of Brazilian literature."[20] Works such as Quincas Borba (Philosopher or Dog?) (1891), Dom Casmurro (1899), Esaú e Jacó (1904) and Memorial de Aires (1908), considered masterpieces,[20] were successes with both critics and the public.[23] In 1893 he published "A Missa do Galo" ("Midnight Mass"), considered his greatest short story.[24]

Later years edit

 
Students and friends, among them Euclides da Cunha, leave the Academy carrying the coffin of Machado de Assis to the Cemetery St. John the Baptist, 1908.

Machado de Assis, along with fellow monarchists such as Joaquim Nabuco, Manuel de Oliveira Lima, Afonso Celso, Viscount of Ouro Preto and Alfredo d'Escragnolle Taunay, and other writers and intellectuals, founded the Brazilian Academy of Letters. He was its first president, from 1897 to 1908, when he died.[1][8] For many years, he requested that the government grant a proper headquarters to the Academy, which he managed to obtain in 1905.[25] In 1902 he was transferred to the accountancy's directing board of the Ministry of Industry.[25]

His wife Carolina Novais died on 20 October 1904, after 35 years of a "perfect married life".[1][25][26] Feeling depressed and lonely, Machado died on 29 September 1908.[15]

Narrative style edit

 
Volume of The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas dedicated by the author himself to the National Library of Brazil.

Machado's style is unique, and several literary critics have tried to describe it since 1897.[27] He is considered by many the greatest Brazilian writer of all time, and one of the world's greatest novelists and short story writers. His chronicles do not share the same status. His poems are often misunderstood for the use of crude terms, sometimes associated to the pessimist style of Augusto dos Anjos, another Brazilian writer. Machado de Assis was included on American literary critic Harold Bloom's list of the greatest 100 geniuses of literature, alongside writers such as Dante, Shakespeare and Cervantes. Bloom considers him the greatest black writer in Western literature; although, in Brazil, Machado is perceived as a Pardo.

His works have been studied by critics in various countries of the world, such as Giuseppe Alpi (Italy), Lourdes Andreassi (Portugal), Albert Bagby Jr. (US), Abel Barros Baptista (Portugal), Hennio Morgan Birchal (Brazil), Edoardo Bizzarri (Italy), Jean-Michel Massa (France), Helen Caldwell (US), John Gledson (England), Adrien Delpech (France), Albert Dessau (Germany), Paul B. Dixon (US), Keith Ellis (US), Edith Fowke (Canada), Anatole France (France), Richard Graham (US), Pierre Hourcade (France), David Jackson (US), G. Reginald Daniel (US), Linda Murphy Kelley (US), John C. Kinnear, Alfred Mac Adam (US), Victor Orban (France), Daphne Patai (US), Houwens Post (Italy), Samuel Putnam (US), John Hyde Schmitt, Tony Tanner (England), Jack E. Tomlins (US), Carmelo Virgillo (US), Dieter Woll (Germany), August Willemsen (Netherlands) and Susan Sontag (US).[28]

Critics are divided as to the nature of Machado de Assis's writing. Some, such as Abel Barros Baptista, classify Machado as a staunch anti-realist, and argue that his writing attacks Realism, aiming to negate the possibility of representation or the existence of a meaningful objective reality. Realist critics such as John Gledson are more likely to regard Machado's work as a faithful description of Brazilian reality—but one executed with daring innovative technique. In light of Machado's own statements, Daniel argues that Machado's novels represent a growing sophistication and daring in maintaining a dialogue between the aesthetic subjectivism of Romanticism (and its offshoots) and the aesthetic objectivism of Realism-Naturalism. Accordingly, Machado's earlier novels have more in common with a hybrid mid-19th-century current often referred to as "Romantic Realism."[29] In addition, his later novels have more in common with another late 19th-century hybrid: literary Impressionism. Historians such as Sidney Chalhoub argue that Machado's prose constitutes an exposé of the social, political and economic dysfunction of late Imperial Brazil. Critics agree on how he used innovative techniques to reveal the contradictions of his society. Roberto Schwarz points out that Machado's innovations in prose narrative are used to expose the hypocrisies, contradictions, and dysfunction of 19th-century Brazil.[30] Schwarz, argues that Machado inverts many narrative and intellectual conventions to reveal the pernicious ends to which they are used. Thus we see critics reinterpret Machado according to their own designs or their perception of how best to validate him for their own historical moment. Regardless, his incisive prose shines through, able to communicate with readers from different times and places, conveying his ironic and yet tender sense of what we, as human beings, are.[29]

Machado's literary style has inspired many Brazilian writers. His works have been adapted to television, theater, and cinema. In 1975 the Comissão Machado de Assis ("Machado de Assis Commission"), organized by the Brazilian Ministry of Education and Culture, organized and published critical editions of Machado's works, in 15 volumes. His main works have been translated into many languages. Great 20th-century writers such as Salman Rushdie, Cabrera Infante and Carlos Fuentes, as well as the American film director Woody Allen, have expressed their enthusiasm for his fiction.[31] Despite the efforts and patronage of such well-known intellectuals as Susan Sontag, Harold Bloom, and Elizabeth Hardwick, Machado's books—the most famous of which are available in English in multiple translations—have never achieved large sales in the English-speaking world and he continues to be relatively unknown, even by comparison with other Latin American writers.

In his works, Machado appeals directly to the reader, breaking the so-called fourth wall.[citation needed]

List of works edit

 
Machado de Assis around age 57, c. 1896
 
Bust in Lisbon
 
Statue in Madrid, Spain, inaugurated in 1998, replica of the statue made by Humberto Cozzo in 1929 for the Brazilian Academy of Letters in Rio de Janeiro..

Novels edit

Novellas edit

  • 1881 – O alienista (The Psychiatrist, or The Alienist)
  • 1886 – Casa velha (published as a book in 1944)

Plays edit

  • 1860 – Hoje avental, amanhã luva
  • 1861 – Desencantos
  • 1863 – O caminho da porta and O protocolo (two plays)
  • 1864 – Quase ministro
  • 1865 – As Forcas Caudinas (published 1956)
  • 1866 – Os deuses de casaca
  • 1878 – A Sonâmbula, Antes da Missa and O bote de rapé (three short plays)
  • 1881 – Tu, só tu, puro amor
  • 1896 – Não consultes médico
  • 1906 – Lição de botânica

Poetry edit

  • 1864 – Crisálidas
  • 1870 – Falenas (including the dramatic poem Uma ode de anacreonte)
  • 1875 – Americanas
  • 1901 – Ocidentais
  • 1901 – Poesias Completas (complete poetry)

Short-story collections edit

  • 1870 – Contos Fluminenses
  • 1873 – Histórias da meia-noite
  • 1882 – Papéis avulsos (including "O alienista")
  • 1884 – Histórias sem data
  • 1896 – Várias histórias
  • 1899 – Páginas recolhidas (including "A Missa do Galo" and "The Case of the Stick")
  • 1906 – Relíquias de Casa Velha

Translations edit

Posthumous edit

  • 1910 – Teatro Coligido (collected plays)
  • 1910 – Crítica
  • 1914 – A Semana (collection of articles)
  • 1921 – Outras Relíquias (collection of short stories)
  • 1921 – Páginas Escolhidas (collection of short stories)
  • 1932 – Novas Relíquias (collection of short stories)
  • 1937 – Crônicas (articles)
  • 1937 – Crítica Literária
  • 1937 – Crítica Teatral
  • 1937 – Histórias Românticas
  • 1939 – Páginas Esquecidas
  • 1944 – Casa Velha
  • 1956 – Diálogos e Reflexões de um Relojoeiro
  • 1958 – Crônicas de Lélio

Collected works

There are several published "Complete Works" of Machado de Assis:

  • 1920 – Obras Completas. Rio de Janeiro: Livraria Garnier (20 vols.)
  • 1962 – Obras Completas. Rio de Janeiro: W.M. Jackson (31 vols.)
  • 1997 – Obras Completas. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Globo (31 vols.)
  • 2006 – Obras Completas. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Aguilar (3 vols.)

Works in English translation

  • 1921 – Brazilian Tales. Boston: The Four Seas Company (London: Dodo Press, 2007).
  • 1952 – Epitaph of a Small Winner. New York: Noonday Press (London: Hogarth Press, 1985; republished as The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas: A Novel. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997; Epitaph of a Small Winner. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008; UK: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2008).
  • 1953 – Dom Casmurro: A Novel. New York: Noonday Press (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966; republished as Dom Casmurro. Lord Taciturn. London: Peter Owen, 1992; Dom Casmurro: A Novel. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997).
  • 1954 – Philosopher or Dog? New York: Avon Books (republished as The Heritage of Quincas Borba. New York: W.H. Allen, 1957; New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1992; republished as Quincas Borba: A Novel. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).
  • 1963 – The Psychiatrist, and Other Stories. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • 1965 – Esau and Jacob. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • 1970 – The Hand & the Glove. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
  • 1972 – Counselor Ayres' Memorial. Berkeley: University of California Press (republished as The Wager: Aires' Journal. London: Peter Owen, 1990; also republished as The Wager, 2005).
  • 1976 – Yayá Garcia: A Novel. London: Peter Owen (republished as Iaiá Garcia. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1977).
  • 1977 – The Devil's Church and Other Stories. Austin: University of Texas Press (New York: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, 1987).
  • 1984 – Helena: A Novel. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • 2008 – A Chapter of Hats and Other Stories. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
  • 2012 – The Alienist. New York: Melville House Publishing.
  • 2013 – Resurrection. Pennsylvania: Latin American Literary Review Press.
  • 2013 – The Alienist and Other Stories of Nineteenth-century Brazil. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing.
  • 2014 – Ex Cathedra: Stories by Machado de Assis — Bilingual Edition. Hanover, Conn.: New London Librarium.
  • 2016 – Miss Dollar: Stories by Machado de Assis — Bilingual Edition. Hanover, Conn.: New London Librarium.
  • 2018 – Trio in A-Minor: Five Stories by Machado de Assis—Bilingual Edition. Hanover, Conn.: New London Librarium.
  • 2018 – The Collected Stories of Machado de Assis. New York : Liveright & Company.
  • 2018 – Good Days!: The Bons Dias! Chronicles of Machado de Assis (1888-1889) — Bilingual Edition. Hanover, Conn.: New London Librarium.

Honours edit

 
1987 banknote of 1,000 Brazilian cruzados featuring Machado de Assis

Honours edit

Tribute edit

On 21 June 2017, Google celebrated his 178th birthday with a Google Doodle.[34]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Vainfas, p. 505.
  2. ^ Candido; Antonio (1970), Vários escritos. São Paulo: Duas Cidades. p. 18.
  3. ^ Caldwell, Helen (1970), Machado de Assis: The Brazilian Master and his Novels. Berkeley, Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.
  4. ^ Fernandez, Oscar, "Machado de Assis: The Brazilian Master and His Novels", The Modern Language Journal, Vol. 55, No. 4 (April 1971), pp. 255–256.
  5. ^ Scarano, p. 775.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Scarano, p. 766.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Vainfas, p. 504.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Enciclopédia Barsa, p. 267.
  9. ^ "Machado de Assis".
  10. ^ Scarano, p. 765.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Scarano, p. 767.
  12. ^ a b c Scarano, p. 769.
  13. ^ Borges, Dain (2016). "Mockery and Piety in Eça de Queirós and Machado de Assis". Revista de Estudos Literários. 6: 97.
  14. ^ a b c d e Scarano, p. 770.
  15. ^ a b Scarano, p. 780.
  16. ^ a b c d e Scarano, p. 773.
  17. ^ Scarano, pp. 774–774.
  18. ^ a b c d e Scarano, p. 774.
  19. ^ a b c Daniel, pp. 61–152.
  20. ^ a b c Bueno, p. 310.
  21. ^ Vainfas, p. 201: "Machado de Assis, porém, soube definí-lo em rápidos traços: um homem lhano, probo, instruído, patriota, que soube fazer do sólio uma poltrona, sem lhe diminuir a grandeza e a consideração."
  22. ^ Bueno, p. 311.
  23. ^ Scarano, p. 777.
  24. ^ Scarano, p. 775.
  25. ^ a b c Scarano, p. 778.
  26. ^ Enciclopédia Barsa, p. 267: "vida conjugal perfeita".
  27. ^ Romero, Silvio (1897), Machado de Assis: Estudo Comparativo da Literatura Brasileira, Rio de Janeiro: Laemmert.
  28. ^ Susan Sontag, Foreword. Epitaph of a Small Winner. By J. M. Machado de Assis. Trans. William Grossman. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1990. xi–xxiv.
  29. ^ a b Daniel, pp. 190–237.
  30. ^ Daniel, pp. 153–218.
  31. ^ Rocha, João Cezar de Castro (2006). (PDF). Portuguese Literature and Cultural Studies. 13/14: xxiv. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2008.
  32. ^ Machado de Assis - Vida e Obra
  33. ^ Machado's translation originally appeared in serial form in the newspaper Jornal da Tarde, from 24 April to 23 August 1870.
  34. ^ "Machado de Assis' 178th Birthday". Google. 21 June 2017.

References edit

  • Bueno, Eduardo (2003). Brasil: Uma História. 1ª ed. São Paulo: Ática. (in Portuguese)
  • Encilopédia Barsa (1987). Volume 10: "Judô – Mercúrio". Rio de Janeiro: Encyclopædia Britannica do Brasil. (in Portuguese)
  • Scarano, Júlia Maria Leonor (1969). Grandes Personagens da Nossa História. São Paulo: Abril Cultural. (in Portuguese)
  • Vainfas, Ronaldo (2002). Dicionário do Brasil Imperial. Rio de Janeiro: Objetiva. (in Portuguese)

Further reading edit

  • Abreu, Modesto de (1939). Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Norte.
  • Andrade, Mário (1943). Aspectos da Literatura Brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: Americ. Ed.
  • Aranha, Graça (1923). Machado de Assis e Joaquim Nabuco: Comentários e Notas à Correspondência. São Paulo: Monteiro Lobato.
  • Barreto Filho (1947). Introdução a Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Agir.
  • Bettencourt Machado, José (1962). Machado of Brazil, the Life and Times of Machado de Assis, Brazil's Greatest Novelist. New York: Charles Frank Publications.
  • Bosi, Alfredo. (Organizador) Machado de Assis. São Paulo: Editora Atica, 1982.
  • Bosi, Alfredo (2000). Machado de Assis: O Enigma do Olhar. São Paulo: Ática.
  • Broca, Brito (1957). Machado de Assis e a Política. Rio de Janeiro: Organização Simões Editora.
  • Chalhoub, Sidney (2003). Machado de Assis, Historiador. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras.
  • Cheney, et al. (editors) (2014) Ex Cathedra: Stories by Machado de Assis--Bilingual Edition. Hanover, CT:New London Librarium ISBN 978-0985628482
  • Corção, Gustavo (1956). Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Agir.
  • Coutinho, Afrânio (1959). A Filosofia de Machado de Assis e Outros Ensaios. Rio de Janeiro: São José.
  • Dantas, Júlio (1940). Machado de Assis. Lisboa: Academia das Ciências.
  • Dixon, Paul B. (1989). Retired Dreams: Dom Casmurro, Myth and Modernity. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press.
  • Faoro, Raimundo (1974). Machado de Assis: Pirâmide e o Trapézio. São Paulo: Cia. Ed. Nacional.
  • Fitz, Earl E. (1989). Machado de Assis. Boston: Twayne Publishers.
  • Gledson, John (1984). The Deceptive Realism of Machado de Assis. Liverpool: Francis Cairns.
  • Gledson, John (1986). Machado de Assis: Ficção e História. Rio de Janeiro: Paz & Terra.
  • Goldberg, Isaac (1922). "Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis." In: Brazilian Literature. New York: Alfred A. Knoff, pp. 142–164.
  • Gomes, Eugênio (1976). Influências Inglesas em Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Pallas; Brasília: INL.
  • Graham, Richard (ed.). Machado de Assis: Reflections on a Brazilian Master Writer. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1999.
  • Lima, Alceu Amoroso (1941). Três Ensaios sobre Machado de Assis. Belo Horizonte: Paulo & Bruhm.
  • Magalhães Jr, Raimundo (1981). Vida e Obra de Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro/Brasília: Civilização Brasileira/INL.
  • Maia Neto, José Raimundo (1984). Machado de Assis, the Brazilian Pyrrhonian. West Lafayette, Ind.: Purdue University Press.
  • Massa, Jean-Michel (1971). A Juventude de Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira.
  • Merquior, José Guilherme (1971). "Machado de Assis e a Prosa Impressionista." In: De Anchieta a Euclides; Breve História da Literatura Brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: José Olympio, pp. 150–201.
  • Meyer, Augusto (1935). Machado de Assis. Porto Alegre: Globo.
  • Meyer, Augusto (1958). Machado de Assis 1935–1958. Rio de Janeiro: Livraria São José.
  • Montello, Jesué (1998). Os Inimigos de Machado de Assis. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Nova Fronteira.
  • Nunes, Maria Luisa (1983). The Craft of an Absolute Winner: Characterization and Narratology in the Novels of Machado de Assis. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
  • Paes, José Paulo. (1985). Gregos e Baianos: Ensaios. São Paulo: Brasiliense.
  • Pereira, Astrogildo (1944). Interpretação. Rio de Janeiro: Casa do Estudante do Brasil.
  • Miguel-Pereira, Lúcia (1936). Machado de Assis: Estudo Critíco e Biográfico. São Paulo: Cia. Ed. Nacional.
  • Schwarz, Roberto (2000). Ao Vencedor as Batatas. São Paulo: Duas Cidades/Editora34.
  • Schwarz, Roberto (1997). Duas Meninas. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras.
  • Schwarz, Roberto (1990). Um Mestre na Periferia do Capitalismo. São Paulo: Duas Cidades. Trans. as A Master on the Periphery of Capitalism. Trans. and intro. John Gledson. Durham: Duke UP, 2001.
  • Sontag, Susan (2001). "Afterlives: The Case of Machado de Assis". In Where the Stress Falls. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
  • Taylor, David (2002). "Wry Modernist of Brazil's Past." Américas, Nov.-Dec., issue. Washington, DC.
  • Veríssimo, José (1916). História da Literatura Brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: Livrarias Aillaud & Bertrand.

External links edit

  • (in Portuguese) Machado de Assis at Brasialiana, University of São Paulo (digitalized first editions of all the books in PDF)
  • (in Portuguese) Complete Works of Machado de Assis – Brazilian Ministry of Education
  • (in Portuguese) MetaLibri Digital Library
    • Contos Fluminenses
    • Dom Casmurro
    • Memórias Póstumas de Bras Cubas
    • Quincas Borba
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Machado de Assis". Books and Writers.
  • (in Portuguese) Machado de Assis a literary biography.
  • (in Portuguese)
  • Manuscrito de Machado de Assis – Handwritten pieces
  • Espaço Machado de Assis
  • João Cezar de Castro Rocha,
  • Works by Machado de Assis at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Machado de Assis at Internet Archive
  • Works by Machado de Assis at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

machado, assis, this, portuguese, name, first, maternal, family, name, machado, second, paternal, family, name, assis, joaquim, maria, portuguese, ʒwɐˈkĩ, mɐˈɾi, mɐˈʃadu, ɐˈsis, often, known, surnames, machado, bruxo, cosme, velho, june, 1839, september, 1908,. In this Portuguese name the first or maternal family name is Machado and the second or paternal family name is Assis Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis Portuguese ʒwɐˈkĩ mɐˈɾi ɐ mɐˈʃadu dʒ i ɐˈsis often known by his surnames as Machado de Assis Machado or Bruxo do Cosme Velho 1 21 June 1839 29 September 1908 was a pioneer Brazilian novelist poet playwright and short story writer widely regarded as the greatest writer of Brazilian literature 2 3 4 In 1897 he founded and became the first President of the Brazilian Academy of Letters He was multilingual having taught himself French English German and Greek later in life Machado de AssisPicture by Marc Ferrez c 18801st Academic of the 23rd chair of the Brazilian Academy of LettersIn office 28 January 1897 29 September 1908Preceded byPosition establishedJose de Alencar patron Succeeded byLafayette Rodrigues PereiraPresident of the Brazilian Academy of LettersIn office 28 January 1897 29 September 1908Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byRuy BarbosaPersonal detailsBornJoaquim Maria Machado de Assis 1839 06 21 21 June 1839Rio de Janeiro Empire of BrazilDied29 September 1908 1908 09 29 aged 69 Rio de Janeiro First Brazilian RepublicSpouseCarolina Augusta Xavier de Novais m 1869 died 1904 wbr OccupationNovelist short story writer poet literary criticPeriod1864 1908MovementRomanticism RealismInfluencesSee list Camoes Vieira Mattos Alencar Almeida Garrett Schopenhauer Spinoza Victor Hugo Poe La Rochefoucauld Goethe Swift Sterne Lucian of Samosata Voltaire Shakespeare Dante CervantesInfluencedSee list John Barth Carlos Drummond de Andrade Cyro dos Anjos Graciliano Ramos Murilo Rubiao Joao Guimaraes Rosa Jorge Amado Erico Verissimo Jose Saramago Rubem Braga Joao Cabral de Melo Neto Vinicius de Moraes Mario de Andrade Manuel Bandeira Chico Buarque de Holanda Jorge de Lima Joaquim Nabuco Plinio Salgado Gilberto Freire Gustavo CorcaoOther namesMachado The Warlock from Cosme Velho SignatureBorn in Morro do Livramento pt Rio de Janeiro from a poor family he was the grandson of freed slaves in a country where slavery would not be fully abolished until 49 years later He barely studied in public schools and never attended university With only his own intellect and autodidactism to rely on he struggled to rise socially To do so he took several public positions passing through the Ministry of Agriculture Trade and Public Works and achieving early fame in newspapers where he first published his poetry and chronicles Machado s work shaped the realist movement in Brazil He became known for his wit and his eye opening critiques of society Generally considered to be Machado s greatest works are Dom Casmurro 1899 Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner and Quincas Borba also known in English as Philosopher or Dog In 1893 he published A Missa do Galo Midnight Mass often considered to be the greatest short story in Brazilian literature 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Birth and adolescence 1 2 Early career and education 1 3 Marriage and family 1 4 Literature 1 5 Later years 2 Narrative style 3 List of works 3 1 Novels 3 2 Novellas 3 3 Plays 3 4 Poetry 3 5 Short story collections 3 6 Translations 3 7 Posthumous 4 Honours 4 1 Honours 4 2 Tribute 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editBirth and adolescence edit nbsp Morro do Livramento The arrow in the top right corner shows the house where Machado was probably born and spent his childhood Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis was born on 21 June 1839 in Rio de Janeiro then capital of the Empire of Brazil 6 7 8 His parents were Francisco Jose de Assis a wall painter the son of freed slaves 9 and Maria Leopoldina da Camara Machado a Portuguese washerwoman from the Azores 7 10 He was born in Livramento country house owned by Dona Maria Jose de Mendonca Barroso Pereira widow of senator Bento Barroso Pereira who protected his parents and allowed them to live with her 6 7 Dona Maria Jose became Joaquim s godmother her brother in law commendator Joaquim Alberto de Sousa da Silveira was his godfather and both were paid homage by giving their names to the baby 6 7 Machado had a sister who died young 8 Joaquim studied in a public school but was not a good student 6 While helping to serve masses he met Father Silveira Sarmento who became his Latin teacher and also a good friend 6 7 When Joaquim was ten years old his mother died and his father took him along as he moved to Sao Cristovao Francisco de Assis met Maria Ines da Silva and they married in 1854 6 7 8 Joaquim had classes in a school for girls only thanks to his stepmother who worked there making candies At night he learned French with an immigrant baker 6 In his adolescence he met Francisco de Paulo Brito who owned a bookstore a newspaper and typography 6 On 12 January 1855 Francisco de Paula published the poem Ela Her written by Joaquim then 15 years old in the newspaper Marmota Fluminense 6 7 8 In the following year he was hired as typographer s apprentice in the Imprensa Oficial the Official Press charged with the publication of Government measures where he was encouraged as a writer by Manuel Antonio de Almeida the newspaper s director and also a novelist 6 There he also met Francisco Otaviano journalist and later liberal senator and Quintino Bocaiuva who decades later would become known for his role as a republican orator 11 Early career and education edit nbsp National Press c 1880 where Machado de Assis began his services as typographer and reviser Francisco Otaviano hired Machado to work on the newspaper Correio Mercantil as a proofreader in 1858 8 11 He continued to write for the Marmota Fluminense and also for several other newspapers but he did not earn much and had a humble life 8 11 As he did not live with his father anymore it was common for him to eat only once a day for lack of money 11 Around this time he became a friend of the writer and liberal politician Jose de Alencar who taught him English From English literature he was influenced by Laurence Sterne William Shakespeare Lord Byron and Jonathan Swift He learned German years later and in his old age Greek 11 He was invited by Bocaiuva to work at his newspaper Diario do Rio de Janeiro in 1860 7 12 Machado had a passion for theater and wrote several plays for a short time his friend Bocaiuva concluded Your works are meant to be read and not played 12 He gained some notability and began to sign his writings as J M Machado de Assis the way he would be known for posterity Machado de Assis 12 He established himself in advanced Liberal Party circles by taking stands in defense of religious freedom and Ernest Renan s controversial Life of Jesus while attacking the venality of the clergy 13 nbsp Machado de Assis when he was 25 years old 1864 His father Francisco de Assis died in 1864 Machado learned of his father s death through acquaintances He dedicated his compilation of poems called Crisalidas to his father To the Memory of Francisco Jose de Assis and Maria Leopoldina Machado de Assis my Parents 14 With the Liberal Party s ascension to power about that time Machado thought he might receive a patronage position that would help him improve his life To his surprise aid came from the Emperor Dom Pedro II who hired him as director assistant in the Diario Oficial in 1867 and knighted him as an honor 14 In 1888 Machado was made an officer of the Order of the Rose 8 Marriage and family edit In 1868 Machado met the Portuguese Carolina Augusta Xavier de Novais five years older than he was 14 She was the sister of his colleague Faustino Xavier de Novais for whom he worked on the magazine O Futuro 8 11 Machado had a stammer and was extremely shy short and lean He was also very intelligent and well learned 14 He married Carolina on 12 November 1869 although her parents Miguel and Adelaide and her siblings disapproved because Machado was of African descent and she was a white woman 7 14 They had no children 15 Literature edit Machado managed to rise in his bureaucratic career first in the Agriculture Department Three years later he became the head of a section in it 7 16 He published two poetry books Falenas in 1870 and Americanas in 1875 16 Their weak reception made him explore other literary genres He wrote five romantic novels Ressurreicao A Mao e a Luva Helena and Iaia Garcia 16 The books were a success with the public but literary critics considered them mediocre 16 Machado suffered repeated attacks of epilepsy apparently related to hearing of the death of his old friend Jose de Alencar He was left melancholic pessimistic and fixed on death 17 His next book marked by a skeptical and realistic tone Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner is widely considered a masterpiece 18 By the end of the 1880s Machado had gained wide renown as a writer 8 Although he was opposed to slavery he never spoke against it in public 16 19 He avoided discussing politics 18 19 He was criticized by the abolitionist Jose do Patrocinio and by the writer Lima Barreto for staying away from politics especially the cause of abolition 1 19 He was also criticized by them for having married a white woman 1 Machado was caught by surprise with the monarchy overthrown on 15 November 1889 18 Machado had no sympathy towards republicanism 18 as he considered himself a liberal monarchist 20 and venerated Pedro II whom he perceived as a humble honest well learned and patriotic man who knew how to make of a throne a chair for his simplicity without diminishing its greatness and respect 21 When a commission went to the public office where he worked to remove the picture of the former emperor the shy Machado defied them The picture got in here by an order and it shall leave only by another order 18 The birth of the Brazilian republic made Machado become more critical and an observer of the Brazilian society of his time 22 From then on he wrote not only the greatest novels of his time but the greatest of all time of Brazilian literature 20 Works such as Quincas Borba Philosopher or Dog 1891 Dom Casmurro 1899 Esau e Jaco 1904 and Memorial de Aires 1908 considered masterpieces 20 were successes with both critics and the public 23 In 1893 he published A Missa do Galo Midnight Mass considered his greatest short story 24 Later years edit nbsp Students and friends among them Euclides da Cunha leave the Academy carrying the coffin of Machado de Assis to the Cemetery St John the Baptist 1908 Machado de Assis along with fellow monarchists such as Joaquim Nabuco Manuel de Oliveira Lima Afonso Celso Viscount of Ouro Preto and Alfredo d Escragnolle Taunay and other writers and intellectuals founded the Brazilian Academy of Letters He was its first president from 1897 to 1908 when he died 1 8 For many years he requested that the government grant a proper headquarters to the Academy which he managed to obtain in 1905 25 In 1902 he was transferred to the accountancy s directing board of the Ministry of Industry 25 His wife Carolina Novais died on 20 October 1904 after 35 years of a perfect married life 1 25 26 Feeling depressed and lonely Machado died on 29 September 1908 15 Narrative style edit nbsp Volume of The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas dedicated by the author himself to the National Library of Brazil Machado s style is unique and several literary critics have tried to describe it since 1897 27 He is considered by many the greatest Brazilian writer of all time and one of the world s greatest novelists and short story writers His chronicles do not share the same status His poems are often misunderstood for the use of crude terms sometimes associated to the pessimist style of Augusto dos Anjos another Brazilian writer Machado de Assis was included on American literary critic Harold Bloom s list of the greatest 100 geniuses of literature alongside writers such as Dante Shakespeare and Cervantes Bloom considers him the greatest black writer in Western literature although in Brazil Machado is perceived as a Pardo His works have been studied by critics in various countries of the world such as Giuseppe Alpi Italy Lourdes Andreassi Portugal Albert Bagby Jr US Abel Barros Baptista Portugal Hennio Morgan Birchal Brazil Edoardo Bizzarri Italy Jean Michel Massa France Helen Caldwell US John Gledson England Adrien Delpech France Albert Dessau Germany Paul B Dixon US Keith Ellis US Edith Fowke Canada Anatole France France Richard Graham US Pierre Hourcade France David Jackson US G Reginald Daniel US Linda Murphy Kelley US John C Kinnear Alfred Mac Adam US Victor Orban France Daphne Patai US Houwens Post Italy Samuel Putnam US John Hyde Schmitt Tony Tanner England Jack E Tomlins US Carmelo Virgillo US Dieter Woll Germany August Willemsen Netherlands and Susan Sontag US 28 Critics are divided as to the nature of Machado de Assis s writing Some such as Abel Barros Baptista classify Machado as a staunch anti realist and argue that his writing attacks Realism aiming to negate the possibility of representation or the existence of a meaningful objective reality Realist critics such as John Gledson are more likely to regard Machado s work as a faithful description of Brazilian reality but one executed with daring innovative technique In light of Machado s own statements Daniel argues that Machado s novels represent a growing sophistication and daring in maintaining a dialogue between the aesthetic subjectivism of Romanticism and its offshoots and the aesthetic objectivism of Realism Naturalism Accordingly Machado s earlier novels have more in common with a hybrid mid 19th century current often referred to as Romantic Realism 29 In addition his later novels have more in common with another late 19th century hybrid literary Impressionism Historians such as Sidney Chalhoub argue that Machado s prose constitutes an expose of the social political and economic dysfunction of late Imperial Brazil Critics agree on how he used innovative techniques to reveal the contradictions of his society Roberto Schwarz points out that Machado s innovations in prose narrative are used to expose the hypocrisies contradictions and dysfunction of 19th century Brazil 30 Schwarz argues that Machado inverts many narrative and intellectual conventions to reveal the pernicious ends to which they are used Thus we see critics reinterpret Machado according to their own designs or their perception of how best to validate him for their own historical moment Regardless his incisive prose shines through able to communicate with readers from different times and places conveying his ironic and yet tender sense of what we as human beings are 29 Machado s literary style has inspired many Brazilian writers His works have been adapted to television theater and cinema In 1975 the Comissao Machado de Assis Machado de Assis Commission organized by the Brazilian Ministry of Education and Culture organized and published critical editions of Machado s works in 15 volumes His main works have been translated into many languages Great 20th century writers such as Salman Rushdie Cabrera Infante and Carlos Fuentes as well as the American film director Woody Allen have expressed their enthusiasm for his fiction 31 Despite the efforts and patronage of such well known intellectuals as Susan Sontag Harold Bloom and Elizabeth Hardwick Machado s books the most famous of which are available in English in multiple translations have never achieved large sales in the English speaking world and he continues to be relatively unknown even by comparison with other Latin American writers In his works Machado appeals directly to the reader breaking the so called fourth wall citation needed List of works editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Machado de Assis around age 57 c 1896 nbsp Bust in Lisbon nbsp Statue in Madrid Spain inaugurated in 1998 replica of the statue made by Humberto Cozzo in 1929 for the Brazilian Academy of Letters in Rio de Janeiro Novels edit 1872 Ressurreicao Resurrection 32 1874 A Mao e a Luva The Hand and the Glove 1876 Helena 1878 Iaia Garcia 1881 Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas also known in English as Epitaph of a Small Winner 1891 Quincas Borba also known in English as Philosopher or Dog 1899 Dom Casmurro 1904 Esau e Jaco Esau and Jacob 1908 Memorial de Aires Counselor Ayres Memorial Novellas edit 1881 O alienista The Psychiatrist or The Alienist 1886 Casa velha published as a book in 1944 Plays edit 1860 Hoje avental amanha luva 1861 Desencantos 1863 O caminho da porta and O protocolo two plays 1864 Quase ministro 1865 As Forcas Caudinas published 1956 1866 Os deuses de casaca 1878 A Sonambula Antes da Missa and O bote de rape three short plays 1881 Tu so tu puro amor 1896 Nao consultes medico 1906 Licao de botanicaPoetry edit 1864 Crisalidas 1870 Falenas including the dramatic poem Uma ode de anacreonte 1875 Americanas 1901 Ocidentais 1901 Poesias Completas complete poetry Short story collections edit 1870 Contos Fluminenses 1873 Historias da meia noite 1882 Papeis avulsos including O alienista 1884 Historias sem data 1896 Varias historias 1899 Paginas recolhidas including A Missa do Galo and The Case of the Stick 1906 Reliquias de Casa VelhaTranslations edit 1861 Queda que as mulheres tem para os tolos from the original De l amour des femmes pour les sots by Victor Henaux 1865 Suplicio de uma mulher from the original Le supplice d une femme by Emile de Girardin 1866 Os Trabalhadores do Mar from the original Les Travailleurs de la mer by Victor Hugo 1870 Oliver Twist from the original Oliver Twist or the Parish Boy s Progress by Charles Dickens 33 1883 O Corvo from The Raven a famous poem by Edgar Allan PoePosthumous edit 1910 Teatro Coligido collected plays 1910 Critica 1914 A Semana collection of articles 1921 Outras Reliquias collection of short stories 1921 Paginas Escolhidas collection of short stories 1932 Novas Reliquias collection of short stories 1937 Cronicas articles 1937 Critica Literaria 1937 Critica Teatral 1937 Historias Romanticas 1939 Paginas Esquecidas 1944 Casa Velha 1956 Dialogos e Reflexoes de um Relojoeiro 1958 Cronicas de LelioCollected worksThere are several published Complete Works of Machado de Assis 1920 Obras Completas Rio de Janeiro Livraria Garnier 20 vols 1962 Obras Completas Rio de Janeiro W M Jackson 31 vols 1997 Obras Completas Rio de Janeiro Editora Globo 31 vols 2006 Obras Completas Rio de Janeiro Nova Aguilar 3 vols Works in English translation 1921 Brazilian Tales Boston The Four Seas Company London Dodo Press 2007 1952 Epitaph of a Small Winner New York Noonday Press London Hogarth Press 1985 republished as The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas A Novel New York Oxford University Press 1997 Epitaph of a Small Winner New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux 2008 UK Bloomsbury Publishing 2008 1953 Dom Casmurro A Novel New York Noonday Press Berkeley University of California Press 1966 republished as Dom Casmurro Lord Taciturn London Peter Owen 1992 Dom Casmurro A Novel New York Oxford University Press 1997 1954 Philosopher or Dog New York Avon Books republished as The Heritage of Quincas Borba New York W H Allen 1957 New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 1992 republished as Quincas Borba A Novel New York Oxford University Press 1998 1963 The Psychiatrist and Other Stories Berkeley University of California Press 1965 Esau and Jacob Berkeley University of California Press 1970 The Hand amp the Glove Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1972 Counselor Ayres Memorial Berkeley University of California Press republished as The Wager Aires Journal London Peter Owen 1990 also republished as The Wager 2005 1976 Yaya Garcia A Novel London Peter Owen republished as Iaia Garcia Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1977 1977 The Devil s Church and Other Stories Austin University of Texas Press New York HarperCollins Publishers Ltd 1987 1984 Helena A Novel Berkeley University of California Press 2008 A Chapter of Hats and Other Stories London Bloomsbury Publishing 2012 The Alienist New York Melville House Publishing 2013 Resurrection Pennsylvania Latin American Literary Review Press 2013 The Alienist and Other Stories of Nineteenth century Brazil Indianapolis Hackett Publishing 2014 Ex Cathedra Stories by Machado de Assis Bilingual Edition Hanover Conn New London Librarium 2016 Miss Dollar Stories by Machado de Assis Bilingual Edition Hanover Conn New London Librarium 2018 Trio in A Minor Five Stories by Machado de Assis Bilingual Edition Hanover Conn New London Librarium 2018 The Collected Stories of Machado de Assis New York Liveright amp Company 2018 Good Days The Bons Dias Chronicles of Machado de Assis 1888 1889 Bilingual Edition Hanover Conn New London Librarium Honours edit nbsp 1987 banknote of 1 000 Brazilian cruzados featuring Machado de AssisFounding member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters 1896 1908 President of the Brazilian Academy of Letters 1897 1908 Honours edit nbsp Empire of Brazil Knight of the Order of the Rose 1867 nbsp Empire of Brazil Officer of the Order of the Rose 1888 Tribute edit On 21 June 2017 Google celebrated his 178th birthday with a Google Doodle 34 Notes edit a b c d e Vainfas p 505 Candido Antonio 1970 Varios escritos Sao Paulo Duas Cidades p 18 Caldwell Helen 1970 Machado de Assis The Brazilian Master and his Novels Berkeley Los Angeles London University of California Press Fernandez Oscar Machado de Assis The Brazilian Master and His Novels The Modern Language Journal Vol 55 No 4 April 1971 pp 255 256 Scarano p 775 a b c d e f g h i j Scarano p 766 a b c d e f g h i j Vainfas p 504 a b c d e f g h i j Enciclopedia Barsa p 267 Machado de Assis Scarano p 765 a b c d e f Scarano p 767 a b c Scarano p 769 Borges Dain 2016 Mockery and Piety in Eca de Queiros and Machado de Assis Revista de Estudos Literarios 6 97 a b c d e Scarano p 770 a b Scarano p 780 a b c d e Scarano p 773 Scarano pp 774 774 a b c d e Scarano p 774 a b c Daniel pp 61 152 a b c Bueno p 310 Vainfas p 201 Machado de Assis porem soube defini lo em rapidos tracos um homem lhano probo instruido patriota que soube fazer do solio uma poltrona sem lhe diminuir a grandeza e a consideracao Bueno p 311 Scarano p 777 Scarano p 775 a b c Scarano p 778 Enciclopedia Barsa p 267 vida conjugal perfeita Romero Silvio 1897 Machado de Assis Estudo Comparativo da Literatura Brasileira Rio de Janeiro Laemmert Susan Sontag Foreword Epitaph of a Small Winner By J M Machado de Assis Trans William Grossman New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 1990 xi xxiv a b Daniel pp 190 237 Daniel pp 153 218 Rocha Joao Cezar de Castro 2006 Introduction PDF Portuguese Literature and Cultural Studies 13 14 xxiv Archived from the original PDF on 25 June 2008 Machado de Assis Vida e Obra Machado s translation originally appeared in serial form in the newspaper Jornal da Tarde from 24 April to 23 August 1870 Machado de Assis 178th Birthday Google 21 June 2017 References editBueno Eduardo 2003 Brasil Uma Historia 1ª ed Sao Paulo Atica in Portuguese Encilopedia Barsa 1987 Volume 10 Judo Mercurio Rio de Janeiro Encyclopaedia Britannica do Brasil in Portuguese Scarano Julia Maria Leonor 1969 Grandes Personagens da Nossa Historia Sao Paulo Abril Cultural in Portuguese Vainfas Ronaldo 2002 Dicionario do Brasil Imperial Rio de Janeiro Objetiva in Portuguese Further reading editAbreu Modesto de 1939 Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Norte Andrade Mario 1943 Aspectos da Literatura Brasileira Rio de Janeiro Americ Ed Aranha Graca 1923 Machado de Assis e Joaquim Nabuco Comentarios e Notas a Correspondencia Sao Paulo Monteiro Lobato Barreto Filho 1947 Introducao a Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Agir Bettencourt Machado Jose 1962 Machado of Brazil the Life and Times of Machado de Assis Brazil s Greatest Novelist New York Charles Frank Publications Bosi Alfredo Organizador Machado de Assis Sao Paulo Editora Atica 1982 Bosi Alfredo 2000 Machado de Assis O Enigma do Olhar Sao Paulo Atica Broca Brito 1957 Machado de Assis e a Politica Rio de Janeiro Organizacao Simoes Editora Chalhoub Sidney 2003 Machado de Assis Historiador Sao Paulo Companhia das Letras Cheney et al editors 2014 Ex Cathedra Stories by Machado de Assis Bilingual Edition Hanover CT New London Librarium ISBN 978 0985628482 Corcao Gustavo 1956 Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Agir Coutinho Afranio 1959 A Filosofia de Machado de Assis e Outros Ensaios Rio de Janeiro Sao Jose Dantas Julio 1940 Machado de Assis Lisboa Academia das Ciencias Dixon Paul B 1989 Retired Dreams Dom Casmurro Myth and Modernity West Lafayette Purdue University Press Faoro Raimundo 1974 Machado de Assis Piramide e o Trapezio Sao Paulo Cia Ed Nacional Fitz Earl E 1989 Machado de Assis Boston Twayne Publishers Gledson John 1984 The Deceptive Realism of Machado de Assis Liverpool Francis Cairns Gledson John 1986 Machado de Assis Ficcao e Historia Rio de Janeiro Paz amp Terra Goldberg Isaac 1922 Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis In Brazilian Literature New York Alfred A Knoff pp 142 164 Gomes Eugenio 1976 Influencias Inglesas em Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Pallas Brasilia INL Graham Richard ed Machado de Assis Reflections on a Brazilian Master Writer Austin TX University of Texas Press 1999 Lima Alceu Amoroso 1941 Tres Ensaios sobre Machado de Assis Belo Horizonte Paulo amp Bruhm Magalhaes Jr Raimundo 1981 Vida e Obra de Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Brasilia Civilizacao Brasileira INL Maia Neto Jose Raimundo 1984 Machado de Assis the Brazilian Pyrrhonian West Lafayette Ind Purdue University Press Massa Jean Michel 1971 A Juventude de Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Civilizacao Brasileira Merquior Jose Guilherme 1971 Machado de Assis e a Prosa Impressionista In De Anchieta a Euclides Breve Historia da Literatura Brasileira Rio de Janeiro Jose Olympio pp 150 201 Meyer Augusto 1935 Machado de Assis Porto Alegre Globo Meyer Augusto 1958 Machado de Assis 1935 1958 Rio de Janeiro Livraria Sao Jose Montello Jesue 1998 Os Inimigos de Machado de Assis Rio de Janeiro Editora Nova Fronteira Nunes Maria Luisa 1983 The Craft of an Absolute Winner Characterization and Narratology in the Novels of Machado de Assis Westport Conn Greenwood Press Paes Jose Paulo 1985 Gregos e Baianos Ensaios Sao Paulo Brasiliense Pereira Astrogildo 1944 Interpretacao Rio de Janeiro Casa do Estudante do Brasil Miguel Pereira Lucia 1936 Machado de Assis Estudo Critico e Biografico Sao Paulo Cia Ed Nacional Schwarz Roberto 2000 Ao Vencedor as Batatas Sao Paulo Duas Cidades Editora34 Schwarz Roberto 1997 Duas Meninas Sao Paulo Companhia das Letras Schwarz Roberto 1990 Um Mestre na Periferia do Capitalismo Sao Paulo Duas Cidades Trans as A Master on the Periphery of Capitalism Trans and intro John Gledson Durham Duke UP 2001 Sontag Susan 2001 Afterlives The Case of Machado de Assis In Where the Stress Falls New York Farrar Straus and Giroux Taylor David 2002 Wry Modernist of Brazil s Past Americas Nov Dec issue Washington DC Verissimo Jose 1916 Historia da Literatura Brasileira Rio de Janeiro Livrarias Aillaud amp Bertrand External links edit nbsp Literature portal nbsp Education portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Latin America portal nbsp Brazil portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Machado de Assis category nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis in Portuguese Machado de Assis at Brasialiana University of Sao Paulo digitalized first editions of all the books in PDF in Portuguese Complete Works of Machado de Assis Brazilian Ministry of Education in Portuguese MetaLibri Digital Library Contos Fluminenses Dom Casmurro Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas Quincas Borba Petri Liukkonen Machado de Assis Books and Writers in Portuguese Machado de Assis a literary biography in Portuguese Books of Machado de Assis in Biblioteca Virtual do Estudante de Lingua Portuguesa Manuscrito de Machado de Assis Handwritten pieces Espaco Machado de Assis Joao Cezar de Castro Rocha Introduction Machado de Assis the Location of an Author Works by Machado de Assis at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Machado de Assis at Internet Archive Works by Machado de Assis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Academic officesPatron Jose de Alencar 1st Academic of the 23rd chair of theBrazilian Academy of Letters1897 1908 Succeeded byLafayette Rodrigues PereiraNew office President of the Brazilian Academy of Letters1897 1908 Succeeded byRui Barbosa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Machado de Assis amp oldid 1197654073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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