Machado de Assis Blackness and the Americas
by
English

About The Book

<p><b>Examines the reception of Brazil's most-canonized writer in the United States to shed light on questions of Blackness and hemispheric American experience.</b></p><p>Considered a genius in his own lifetime Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis (1839-1908) is Brazil's most canonized writer. Yet he remains a contested and even enigmatic figure to readers in Brazil and abroad his relative silence on slavery leaving him vulnerable to charges of aspirations to whiteness. <i>Machado de Assis Blackness and the Americas</i> reconsiders this issue by exploring how his prose fiction has been received in the United States. In seven original essays contributors re-examine his novels and short stories as well as photographs of the writer in order to better understand the strategies he employed to navigate Brazil's literary scene as a man of African descent. Framed by a contextualizing introduction and an afterword in the form of a conversation between the editors the volume speaks to and with our own historical moment and the realities of Black lives in the Americas over the course of the last two centuries.</p>
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