Book contents
- Modernity in Black and White
- Afro-Latin America
- Modernity in Black and White
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Usage of Brazilian Portuguese
- Introduction
- 1 Heart of Darkness in the Bosom of the Modern Metropolis
- 2 A Pagan Festival for the Up to Date
- 3 The Printing of Modern Life
- 4 The Cosmopolitan Savage
- 5 The Face of the Land
- Epilogue
- Index
4 - The Cosmopolitan Savage
Modernism, Primitivism and the Anthropophagic Descent
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2021
- Modernity in Black and White
- Afro-Latin America
- Modernity in Black and White
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Usage of Brazilian Portuguese
- Introduction
- 1 Heart of Darkness in the Bosom of the Modern Metropolis
- 2 A Pagan Festival for the Up to Date
- 3 The Printing of Modern Life
- 4 The Cosmopolitan Savage
- 5 The Face of the Land
- Epilogue
- Index
Summary
The Anthropophagic movement, of 1928-1929, was the most systematic and concerted effort within Brazilian modernism to address the concept of primitivism. Yet, contrary to much that has been written about it and in contrast with other modernist ventures, it largely skirted issues of blackness and Afro-Brazilian identity. The scholarly literature has tended to reduce the movement to Oswald de Andrade’s ‘Manifesto Antropófago’, and has therefore failed to comprehend its broader scope. The chapter focuses on Antropofagia’s relationship to race and primitivism and discusses the distinction the anthropophagists made between the savage, as a Freudian trope, and the primitive, as an ethnological one. The differing positions of 1920s modernists towards Afro-Brazilian religions and samba are revealing of subtle ideological distinctions. The intersection of class and race became a central concern for communist observers like French poet Benjamin Péret. For writer Mário de Andrade, on the other hand, the quest for autochthonous cultural forms led to a focus on folklore that romanticized ideals of national and racialist identities. The high modernist paradigm, as it eventually took shape after the late 1930s, tended to ignore the needs of subaltern populations or else appropriate them and erase them in favour of a nationalist project.
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- Modernity in Black and WhiteArt and Image, Race and Identity in Brazil, 1890–1945, pp. 172 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021