From Antropofagia to Global Lusophone Studies

Edited by Ami Schiess and Giulia Champion

Portuguese Studies 38.2

Modern Humanities Research Association

12 December 2022

ISBN: 978-1-839542-39-8 (paperback)

Access online: At Project MUSE

Portuguese


Contents:

1-9

Introduction: From Antropofagia to Global Lusophone Studies
Ami Schiess, Giulia Champion
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0009

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10-21

Religious Transfusion in the Early Modern Kingdom of Kongo
Vincent Barletta
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0010

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22-41

From Vieira to Andrade: Jesuits, Brazilian Modernists and Cultural Cannibalism
Jessica Sequeira
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0011

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42-56

Silva Lisboa's Appeal to Conservative Authors in Defence of the Kingdom of Brazil
Guilherme Celestino
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0012

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57-73

An Aesthetics of Iron: Lima Barreto, Avant-Garde Fascism, and Modernismo's Erasure of Blackness
Luís Madureira
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0013

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74-89

Cannibals in Translation (Studies): Haroldo de Campos, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, and the Echoes of Antropofagia
Ami Schiess
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0014

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90-93

Review of Maria Manuel Lisboa, Essays on Paula Rego: Smile When You Think about Hell
Peter Haysom
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0015

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93-96

Review of Christoph Kalter, Postcolonial People: The Return from Africa and the Remaking of Portugal
Olivia Glaze
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0016

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96-99

Review of Peter J. Maurits, The Mozambican Modern Ghost Story (1866–2006): The Genealogy of a Genre
Thomas Waller
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0017

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99-102

Review of Hilary Owen and Claire Williams (ed.), Transnational Portuguese Studies
Mark Sabine
doi:10.1353/port.2022.0018

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