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The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas

The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas (Portuguese: Memorias Posthumas de Braz Cubas, modern spelling Memórias Póstumas de Brás Cubas), also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner, is a novel by the Brazilian writer Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis (born in Rio de Janeiro City, then Imperial Capital of Brazil).

The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas
The author dedicated this copy to the Biblioteca Nacional, the National Library of Brazil.
AuthorJoaquim Maria Machado de Assis
Original titleMemórias Póstumas de Brás Cubas
TranslatorGregory Rabassa
CountryBrazil (Rio de Janeiro)
LanguagePortuguese
GenreNovel
PublisherOxford University Press (Eng. Trans. hardback edition)
Publication date
1881 (1 October 1997 Eng. translation)
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages238 p. (Eng. Trans. hardback edition)
ISBN0-19-510169-3 (Eng. Trans. hardback edition)
OCLC35586796
869.3 20
LC ClassPQ9697.M18 M513 1997

Published in 1881, the novel has a unique style of short, erratic chapters shifting in tone and style. Instead of the clear and logical construction of a normal nineteenth-century realist novel, the novel makes use of surreal devices of metaphor and playful narrative construction. It is considered the first novel of the realist movement in Brazil.

Outline edit

The novel is narrated by the dead protagonist Brás Cubas, who tells his own life story from beyond the grave, noting his mistakes and failed romances.

The fact of being already deceased allows Brás Cubas to sharply criticize the Brazilian society and reflect on his own disillusionment, with no sign of remorse or fear of retaliation. Brás Cubas dedicates his book: "To the worm who first gnawed on the cold flesh of my corpse, I dedicate with fond remembrance these Posthumous Memoirs" (Portuguese: Ao verme que primeiro roeu as frias carnes do meu cadáver dedico com saudosa lembrança estas Memórias Póstumas), which indicates that not a single person he met through his life deserved the book. Cubas decides to tell his story starting from the end (the passage of his death, caused by pneumonia), then taking "the greatest leap in this story", proceeding to tell the story of his life since his childhood.

The novel is also connected to another Machado de Assis work, Quincas Borba, which features a character from the Memoirs (as a secondary character, despite the novel's name), but other works of the author are hinted in chapter titles. It is a novel recalled as a major influence by many post-modern writers, such as John Barth or Donald Barthelme, as well as Brazilian writers in the 20th century.[1]

Plot edit

The author explains the style of the book before beginning the story with his funeral and cause of death - "Brás Cubas poultice", a medical panacea that was his last obsession and "would guarantee him glory among men". He then goes back to his childhood.

He was a wealthy, spoiled and wicked child. From an early age he showed signs of a perverse nature, beating the heads of his slaves when he was not attended to in some desire or playing at horse-riding on the back of a young male slave named Prudêncio. At the age of seventeen Brás Cubas falls in love with a prostitute named Marcela, an affair which lasts "fifteen months and eleven contos" and almost wipes out the family fortune.

To forget this heartbreak the protagonist is sent to Coimbra to study law. After a few years of wild bohemianism, "following romanticism in practice and liberalism in theory", he returns to Rio de Janeiro on the occasion of the death of his mother. He falls in love with a girl named Eugênia, the daughter of Dona Eusébia, a poor friend of the family, who turns out to be lame from birth. His father plans to a political marriage with Virgília, daughter of Conselheiro Dutra. However, Virgília prefers to marry Lobo Neves, who is also a candidate for a political career. With the death of Brás Cubas' father, conflict breaks out over the inheritance between him and his sister Sabina, and her husband Cotrim.

Virgília, now married, encounters Brás Cubas at a ball and they begin an adulterous affair. Virgília becomes pregnant but the child dies before being born. To keep the affair secret Brás Cubas bribes Virgília's former seamstress Dona Plácida to act as the resident of a small house in Gamboa, which serves as a meeting place for the lovers. Cubas meets Quincas Borba, a childhood friend who has fallen on hard times. He steals Cubas' watch, later returning it to him. He introduces Cubas to his philosophical system, Humanitism.

Pursuing fame or excitement Brás Cubas becomes a deputy. Lobo Neves is appointed governor of a province and leaves with Virgília for the north, ending the affair. Sabina finds a wife for Brás Cubas, Nhã-Loló, Cotrim's 19-year-old niece, but she dies of yellow fever and Brás Cubas becomes a confirmed bachelor. He tries unsuccessfully to be Minister of State and to found an opposition newspaper. Quincas Borba shows signs of dementia. An aging Virgília asks him to support the impoverished Dona Plácida, who then dies. Lobo Neves, Marcela and Quincas Borba also die. Eugênia falls into poverty. His last attempt at glory is the "Brás Cubas poultice", a medicine that will cure all diseases. Ironically, while going out to take care of his project he is caught in a rainstorm and catches pneumonia, from which he dies at age sixty-four. Virgília, accompanied by her son, visits his deathbed. After dying he begins to tell the story of his life backwards, concluding that on balance his life has been slightly positive because he has not had children, and thus he has not "transmitted the legacy of misery".

Philosophy of Brás Cubas edit

Cubas considers his life in the manner of an accounting, finding neither any positives or negatives; but he then realises that since he has not fathered any children he has not passed on the "misery" of life any further. For this reason he considers his life a success. Assis published his work in 1881 and it is influenced by the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer, a German philosopher whose philosophical magnum opus, The World as Will and Representation was first published in 1818. Schopenhauer's influence on the novel's philosophy is without doubt when one compares Cubas' description of insects and his attitude towards animals, which is a feature of Schopenhauer's philosophical outlook; and in Schopenhauer's writing he similarly uses examples from the animal kingdom to illustrate a philosophical truth (most famously that of the Australian bull-ant). Assis' allusion to Schopenhauer's philosophy is also 'formal': the chapter structure of The Posthumous Memoirs mimics that of Schopenhauer's World as Will and Representation; Bras Cubas' "method" in the novel, specifically the practice of referring to incidents in previous chapters by the chapter number, is imitative. Schopenhauer is often referred to as the 'King' of pessimists, or the 'Philosopher of despair'; his outlook is heavily linked to that of Buddhism.

It is important to note that Assis created a philosophical theory to criticize Positivism, which was common in Brazil's literature back then. The theory in question was Humanitism, created in the books by Quincas Borba, a friend of Brás Cubas who had gone mad before dying. By doing this, Assis sharply criticizes the current philosophical theories, implying that only someone crazy would believe in them. Humanitism is to believe in Humanitas, which, according to Borba, is "the principle of the things, the same man equally distributed in all men". Therefore, if all men are equally Humanitas, an executioner killing a convict of murder is just "Humanitas correcting Humanitas because of an infraction of the laws of Humanitas". Envy is just "an admiration that fights for Humanitas against Humanitas", and thus, "being the war the grand function of the human genus, all the pugnacious feeling are the most adequate to happiness. From this, I came to the conclusion: envy is a virtue". If envy is a virtue, then cynicism, vanity and egoism are legitimated. Assis, through an ingenious fallacy, implied that envy is positive, in the same way many theories could "prove" true something clearly absurd looking through today's eyes.

Reception edit

In an article in The Guardian, Woody Allen listed the work as one of his favorites. He said in an interview with the newspaper:

I just got this in the mail one day. Some stranger in Brazil sent it and wrote, "You'll like this". Because it's a thin book, I read it. If it had been a thick book, I would have discarded it. I was shocked by how charming and amusing it was. I couldn't believe he lived as long ago as he did. You would've thought he wrote it yesterday. It's so modern and so amusing. It's a very, very original piece of work. It rang a bell in me, in the same way that The Catcher in the Rye did. It was about subject matter that I liked and it was treated with great wit, great originality and no sentimentality.[2]

In the New York Times, Parul Sehgal praised the book new release with a new translation, also praising its irony and charm, while asking the readers "Is it possible that the most modern, most startlingly avant-garde novel to appear this year was originally published in 1881?".[3] In the same 2020 release, Dave Eggers from The New Yorker defined the book as "one of the wittiest, most playful, and therefore most alive and ageless books ever written".[4]

Translations edit

There have been multiple translations. It was first translated into English in 1952 as Epitaph of a Small Winner by William L. Grossman.[5] In 1997, it was translated as The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas by Gregory Rabassa.[6] In 2020, there were two new translations, by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux (Penguin Classics) and Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson (Liveright). The New York Times named Jull Costa and Patterson's translation "the superior translation" (Parul Sehgal, The New York Times).[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Rohter, Larry (2008-09-12). "After a Century, a Literary Reputation Finally Blooms". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-06-17.
  2. ^ "Woody Allen's top five books" at The Guardian.
  3. ^ "A Playful Masterpiece That Expanded the Novel's Possibilities". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  4. ^ "Rediscovering One of the Wittiest Books Ever Written". The New Yorker. The New Yorker. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  5. ^ Fitts, Dudley (1952-07-13). "A Masterpiece From Brazil; EPITAPH OF A SMALL WINNER. By Machado de Assis. Translated from the Portuguese by William L. Grossman. Illustrated by Shari Frisch. 223 pp. New York: Noonday Press. $3.50". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-06-16.
  6. ^ Assis, Machado de; Rabassa, Gregory (1997). The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-510169-0.
  7. ^ Sehgal, Parul (2020-06-16). "A Playful Masterpiece That Expanded the Novel's Possibilities". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-06-16.

External links edit

  • Memórias Póstumas de Bras Cubas (in Portuguese)
  •   Memórias Póstumas de Brás Cubas public domain audiobook at LibriVox (in Portuguese)
  • Schwarz, Roberto (2005), "The Machadian turning point", São Paulo: CEBRAP magazine.

posthumous, memoirs, brás, cubas, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, message, po. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas Portuguese Memorias Posthumas de Braz Cubas modern spelling Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas also translated as Epitaph of a Small Winner is a novel by the Brazilian writer Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis born in Rio de Janeiro City then Imperial Capital of Brazil The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras CubasThe author dedicated this copy to the Biblioteca Nacional the National Library of Brazil AuthorJoaquim Maria Machado de AssisOriginal titleMemorias Postumas de Bras CubasTranslatorGregory RabassaCountryBrazil Rio de Janeiro LanguagePortugueseGenreNovelPublisherOxford University Press Eng Trans hardback edition Publication date1881 1 October 1997 Eng translation Media typePrint Hardback amp Paperback Pages238 p Eng Trans hardback edition ISBN0 19 510169 3 Eng Trans hardback edition OCLC35586796Dewey Decimal869 3 20LC ClassPQ9697 M18 M513 1997 Published in 1881 the novel has a unique style of short erratic chapters shifting in tone and style Instead of the clear and logical construction of a normal nineteenth century realist novel the novel makes use of surreal devices of metaphor and playful narrative construction It is considered the first novel of the realist movement in Brazil Contents 1 Outline 2 Plot 3 Philosophy of Bras Cubas 4 Reception 5 Translations 6 References 7 External linksOutline editThe novel is narrated by the dead protagonist Bras Cubas who tells his own life story from beyond the grave noting his mistakes and failed romances The fact of being already deceased allows Bras Cubas to sharply criticize the Brazilian society and reflect on his own disillusionment with no sign of remorse or fear of retaliation Bras Cubas dedicates his book To the worm who first gnawed on the cold flesh of my corpse I dedicate with fond remembrance these Posthumous Memoirs Portuguese Ao verme que primeiro roeu as frias carnes do meu cadaver dedico com saudosa lembranca estas Memorias Postumas which indicates that not a single person he met through his life deserved the book Cubas decides to tell his story starting from the end the passage of his death caused by pneumonia then taking the greatest leap in this story proceeding to tell the story of his life since his childhood The novel is also connected to another Machado de Assis work Quincas Borba which features a character from the Memoirs as a secondary character despite the novel s name but other works of the author are hinted in chapter titles It is a novel recalled as a major influence by many post modern writers such as John Barth or Donald Barthelme as well as Brazilian writers in the 20th century 1 Plot editThe author explains the style of the book before beginning the story with his funeral and cause of death Bras Cubas poultice a medical panacea that was his last obsession and would guarantee him glory among men He then goes back to his childhood He was a wealthy spoiled and wicked child From an early age he showed signs of a perverse nature beating the heads of his slaves when he was not attended to in some desire or playing at horse riding on the back of a young male slave named Prudencio At the age of seventeen Bras Cubas falls in love with a prostitute named Marcela an affair which lasts fifteen months and eleven contos and almost wipes out the family fortune To forget this heartbreak the protagonist is sent to Coimbra to study law After a few years of wild bohemianism following romanticism in practice and liberalism in theory he returns to Rio de Janeiro on the occasion of the death of his mother He falls in love with a girl named Eugenia the daughter of Dona Eusebia a poor friend of the family who turns out to be lame from birth His father plans to a political marriage with Virgilia daughter of Conselheiro Dutra However Virgilia prefers to marry Lobo Neves who is also a candidate for a political career With the death of Bras Cubas father conflict breaks out over the inheritance between him and his sister Sabina and her husband Cotrim Virgilia now married encounters Bras Cubas at a ball and they begin an adulterous affair Virgilia becomes pregnant but the child dies before being born To keep the affair secret Bras Cubas bribes Virgilia s former seamstress Dona Placida to act as the resident of a small house in Gamboa which serves as a meeting place for the lovers Cubas meets Quincas Borba a childhood friend who has fallen on hard times He steals Cubas watch later returning it to him He introduces Cubas to his philosophical system Humanitism Pursuing fame or excitement Bras Cubas becomes a deputy Lobo Neves is appointed governor of a province and leaves with Virgilia for the north ending the affair Sabina finds a wife for Bras Cubas Nha Lolo Cotrim s 19 year old niece but she dies of yellow fever and Bras Cubas becomes a confirmed bachelor He tries unsuccessfully to be Minister of State and to found an opposition newspaper Quincas Borba shows signs of dementia An aging Virgilia asks him to support the impoverished Dona Placida who then dies Lobo Neves Marcela and Quincas Borba also die Eugenia falls into poverty His last attempt at glory is the Bras Cubas poultice a medicine that will cure all diseases Ironically while going out to take care of his project he is caught in a rainstorm and catches pneumonia from which he dies at age sixty four Virgilia accompanied by her son visits his deathbed After dying he begins to tell the story of his life backwards concluding that on balance his life has been slightly positive because he has not had children and thus he has not transmitted the legacy of misery Philosophy of Bras Cubas editCubas considers his life in the manner of an accounting finding neither any positives or negatives but he then realises that since he has not fathered any children he has not passed on the misery of life any further For this reason he considers his life a success Assis published his work in 1881 and it is influenced by the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer a German philosopher whose philosophical magnum opus The World as Will and Representation was first published in 1818 Schopenhauer s influence on the novel s philosophy is without doubt when one compares Cubas description of insects and his attitude towards animals which is a feature of Schopenhauer s philosophical outlook and in Schopenhauer s writing he similarly uses examples from the animal kingdom to illustrate a philosophical truth most famously that of the Australian bull ant Assis allusion to Schopenhauer s philosophy is also formal the chapter structure of The Posthumous Memoirs mimics that of Schopenhauer s World as Will and Representation Bras Cubas method in the novel specifically the practice of referring to incidents in previous chapters by the chapter number is imitative Schopenhauer is often referred to as the King of pessimists or the Philosopher of despair his outlook is heavily linked to that of Buddhism It is important to note that Assis created a philosophical theory to criticize Positivism which was common in Brazil s literature back then The theory in question was Humanitism created in the books by Quincas Borba a friend of Bras Cubas who had gone mad before dying By doing this Assis sharply criticizes the current philosophical theories implying that only someone crazy would believe in them Humanitism is to believe in Humanitas which according to Borba is the principle of the things the same man equally distributed in all men Therefore if all men are equally Humanitas an executioner killing a convict of murder is just Humanitas correcting Humanitas because of an infraction of the laws of Humanitas Envy is just an admiration that fights for Humanitas against Humanitas and thus being the war the grand function of the human genus all the pugnacious feeling are the most adequate to happiness From this I came to the conclusion envy is a virtue If envy is a virtue then cynicism vanity and egoism are legitimated Assis through an ingenious fallacy implied that envy is positive in the same way many theories could prove true something clearly absurd looking through today s eyes Reception editIn an article in The Guardian Woody Allen listed the work as one of his favorites He said in an interview with the newspaper I just got this in the mail one day Some stranger in Brazil sent it and wrote You ll like this Because it s a thin book I read it If it had been a thick book I would have discarded it I was shocked by how charming and amusing it was I couldn t believe he lived as long ago as he did You would ve thought he wrote it yesterday It s so modern and so amusing It s a very very original piece of work It rang a bell in me in the same way that The Catcher in the Rye did It was about subject matter that I liked and it was treated with great wit great originality and no sentimentality 2 In the New York Times Parul Sehgal praised the book new release with a new translation also praising its irony and charm while asking the readers Is it possible that the most modern most startlingly avant garde novel to appear this year was originally published in 1881 3 In the same 2020 release Dave Eggers from The New Yorker defined the book as one of the wittiest most playful and therefore most alive and ageless books ever written 4 Translations editThere have been multiple translations It was first translated into English in 1952 as Epitaph of a Small Winner by William L Grossman 5 In 1997 it was translated as The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas by Gregory Rabassa 6 In 2020 there were two new translations by Flora Thomson DeVeaux Penguin Classics and Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson Liveright The New York Times named Jull Costa and Patterson s translation the superior translation Parul Sehgal The New York Times 7 References edit Rohter Larry 2008 09 12 After a Century a Literary Reputation Finally Blooms The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 06 17 Woody Allen s top five books at The Guardian A Playful Masterpiece That Expanded the Novel s Possibilities The New York Times Retrieved 25 September 2022 Rediscovering One of the Wittiest Books Ever Written The New Yorker The New Yorker Retrieved 25 September 2022 Fitts Dudley 1952 07 13 A Masterpiece From Brazil EPITAPH OF A SMALL WINNER By Machado de Assis Translated from the Portuguese by William L Grossman Illustrated by Shari Frisch 223 pp New York Noonday Press 3 50 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 06 16 Assis Machado de Rabassa Gregory 1997 The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510169 0 Sehgal Parul 2020 06 16 A Playful Masterpiece That Expanded the Novel s Possibilities The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 06 16 External links edit nbsp Portuguese Wikisource has original text related to this article Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas in Portuguese nbsp Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas public domain audiobook at LibriVox in Portuguese Schwarz Roberto 2005 The Machadian turning point Sao Paulo CEBRAP magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas amp oldid 1139726104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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