• Books
    • Travel Made Fiction - South America by Air
    • Five "Romances" of "Cordel"
    • Rural Odyssey VI Abilene - Trail Mix
    • Letters from Brazil V
    • Brazil’s “Literatura De Cordel” – The broadside engravings of Mexico’s Jose Guadalupe Posada
    • The Farm
    • The Royal Princess
    • Rural Odyssey V - Trouble in a Kansas Town
    • "Adventure Travel" in Colombia - Moments of Mayhem Or, Colombia Revisited
    • The Writing and Publishing Journey
    • Rural Odyssey IV Parallels - Abilene - Cowboys - "Cordel"
    • Two by Mark J Curran
    • Adventure Travel in Guatemala - The Maya Heritage
    • The Master of the ‘Literatura de Cordel’ - Leandro Gomes de Barros
    • Letters from Brazil IV
    • The Collection
    • A Rural Odyssey - Living Can Be Dangerous
    • A Rural Odyssey II - Abilene
    • Rural Odyssey III - Dreams Fulfilled and Back to Abilene
    • Around Brazil on the "International Adventurer"
    • Pre-Columbian Mexico: Plans, Pitfalls, and Perils
    • Portugal and Spain on the International Adventurer
    • Letters from Brazil: A Cultural-Historical Narrative Made Fiction
    • Letters from Brazil II
    • Letters from Brazil III
    • A Professor takes to the Sea
    • Diary of a North American Researcher in Brazil III
    • A Professor Takes to the Sea, Volume II
    • It Happened In Brazil
    • Relembrando – A Velha Literatura de Cordel e a Voz dos Poetas
    • Travel and Teaching in Portugal and Spain – A Photographic Journey
    • Fifty Years of Research on Brazil
    • A Portrait of Brazil in the Twentieth Century
    • Travel, Research and Teaching in Guatemala and Mexico. Volume I, Guatemala
    • Travel, Research and Teaching in Guatemala and Mexico. Volume II, Mexico
    • A Trip to Colombia
    • Coming of Age with the Jesuits
    • Adventures of a “Gringo” Researcher in Brazil, Or, In Search of “Cordel”
    • Retrato do Brasil em Cordel
    • Jorge Amado e a Literatura de Cordel
    • A Literatura de Cordel
    • La Literatura De Cordel Brasileña: Antología Bilingüe en Espanol y Portugues
    • A Presença De Rodolfo Coelho Cavalcante na Moderna Literatura de Cordel
    • Cuíca De Santo Amaro Poeta-Repórter Da Bahia
    • Cuíca De Santo Amaro Controvérsia no Cordel
    • Brazil’s Folk – Popular Poetry
    • História Do Brasil Em Cordel
  • Cordel
    • What is Cordel?
    • Cordel's Public Role
    • Cordel for All?
    • Then and Now
  • Bio
  • Contact
  • Home

Curran's Cordel Connection

Jorge Amado e a Literatura de Cordel

JorgeAmadoLiteraturaCordel

Salvador:FundaçãoCasa de Jorge Amado  -- Fundação Casade Rui Barbosa, 1981, 95 pp.

This monograph was published on the occasion of the celebration of fifty years of literature of Jorge Amado in Bahia in 1981.  Because it was part of the Amado celebration covered by television, national news magazines and Vargas Llosa for Peruvian television, Amado appeared at the book signing and Isto É included an article on Curran and the book in its feature article of that week’s issue.

The book is modest in size and specialized in scope, but is of value if one enjoys reading Jorge Amado, recognizes his role in Brazilian fiction and wants to see just one, small facet of his novelistic technique.  Its thesis derives from Amado’s own statement that his novels in large part owe a large debt to the humble masses [povo] and their own folk-popular culture and that he indeed is a “teller of stories” heard from the poor.

Amado was familiar with the cordelian stories in verse from the very beginning of his career and immortalized the Bahian poet Cuíca de Santo Amaro and later Rodolfo Coelho Cavalcante in successive editions of his guidebook and best seller Bahia de Todos os Santos, a must for any Portuguese speaking tourist in Salvador da Bahia.  More important, Amado recognized that both the themes and the narrative, heroic style of cordel were a good fit for his own storytelling, i.e. the ABC format of cordel, the archtypes among its protagonists, and the storyteller in verse himself, the poet of cordel, as both narrator and an important popular personage in the Northeast.  Curran’s book summarizes studies on the older novels and details Amado’s use of cordel in Os Pastores da Noite, his thesis novel Tenda dos Milagres and especially Teresa Batista Cansada de Guerra.

 

Buy this Book:
You can purchase this book on amazon.com

Submit to DiggSubmit to FacebookSubmit to StumbleuponSubmit to TwitterSubmit to LinkedIn
  • Português
  • English (UK)
© 2024 Dr. Mark J. Curran