João Cabral de Melo Neto

João Cabral de Melo Neto
Born João Cabral de Melo Neto
(1920-01-09)9 January 1920
Recife, Brazil
Died 9 October 1999(1999-10-09) (aged 79)
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Occupation Writer
Nationality Brazilian
Notable awards Camões Prize
1990
Neustadt International Prize for Literature
1992

João Cabral de Melo Neto (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʒwɐ̃w kaˈbɾaw dʒi ˈmɛlu ˈnɛtu]), (January 9, 1920 – October 9, 1999) was a Brazilian poet and diplomat, and one of the most influential writers in late Brazilian modernism. He was awarded the 1990 Camões Prize and the 1992 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, the only Brazilian poet to receive such award to date. He was considered until his death a perennial competitor for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Melo Neto's works are characterized by a staunch formal righteousness that was present in several layers of his poems, something that distinguishes his oeuvre from that of any other Brazilian poet. His style ranges from the surrealist tendency that marked his early poetry to the use of regional elements of his native northeastern Brazil, including the traditional form of the cordel. In Morte e Vida Severina, the only of his works that have come to be widely read by the general public, both these later aspects are found through Melo Neto's addressing the culture and the harshness of life in arid Pernambuco.

Life and career

Melo Neto was born in Recife, Pernambuco, and spent most of his youth in his family's sugar-cane mills in the interior of the state.[1] He was a cousin of distinguished poet Manuel Bandeira and sociologist Gilberto Freyre. In 1940, his family moved to Rio de Janeiro.

Two years later, Melo Neto published his first book of poems, Pedra do Sono, from his own expense, with a circulation of 340 copies.[2] In 1945, he applied to the position of diplomat, a position he would hold for most of his life. The following year, he married Stella Maria Barbosa de Oliveira, with whom he had five children.

After passing through several different countries, he became consul of Brazil in Porto in 1984, only returning to Rio de Janeiro three years later. He worked for many years in Spain, and his experiences there would greatly influence his poetry of the time.

In 1956, Melo Neto published his most famous work, Morte e Vida Severina, and, in 1968, he was elected to the 37th chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.[1]

In 1986, he married Marly de Oliveira and, two years later, he retired, resigning from his office as ambassador. Melo Neto died in 1999, in Rio de Janeiro.[2] In a career spanning more than fifty years, Melo Neto published 18 books of poetry and two autos.[3]

Poetry

Melo Neto's works are dry and often devoid of any emotions, sticking to an esthetic rigor averse to any sort of confessions by the poet. Melo Neto's writing focuses on images, actions, and physical descriptions rather than feelings. Because of this, the image of an engineer designing a building is often used to describe his poetry, an epithet Melo Neto himself adopted. His poetry was also marked by his strict use of meter and assonant rhymes.

Melo Neto searched for an elaborate construction of language and thought, attempting to transform the perception of an object into something concrete and definable by the senses, most notably to touching. One of the greatest achievements Melo Neto accomplished in this task was his poem Uma Faca Só Lâmina ("A Knife All Blade"), in which he presents the image of a knife cutting through the feeling of emptiness as if cutting directly into the flesh, a sensorial metaphor used to portray the idea of inspiration.

Melo Neto frequently uses antithetical dualities in his poems, often worked to exhaustion: time and space, inside and outside, corporal and spiritual, male and female, the northeastern Brazil and the Andalusian fertile semidesert, or the Savanna and the Pernambucan humid desert, attempting to reach a purely objective and communicative poetry.

About his poetry, one of the founder figures of Concretism, Augusto de Campos has said:

Works

Some of the most famous poems of Melo Neto are:

  • "Morte e Vida Severina" (translated in part by Elizabeth Bishop as "The Death and Life of Severino"), his most famous work, is a long narrative poem (in most editions over 80 pages long) that describes the life of a poor rural man in the dry northeastern part of Brazil and his migration to the city. The main character, Severino, whose name works as an adjective to his own life, represents every person who inhabits that region and suffers from its misery.
  • "Uma Faca só Lâmina" (A Knife All Blade) is also considered to be one of his best works, and was translated to English in 1980. The poem is about the many ways to describe "that sorrowful absence in a man".
  • "Cão sem Plumas" (A Dog Without Feathers) describes the Capibaribe River of Pernambuco and the poverty-stricken community that surrounds it.

Poetry

  • 1942: Pedra do Sono (Slumber Stone)
  • 1943: Os Três Mal-Amados (The Three Unloved)
  • 1945: O Engenheiro (The Engineer)
  • 1947: Psicologia da Composição com a Fábula de Anfion e Antiode (Psychology of Composition with the Fable of Amphion and Anti-Ode)
  • 1950: O Cão sem Plumas (The Dog without Feathers)
  • 1953: O Rio ou Relação da Viagem que Faz o Capibaribe de Sua Nascente à Cidade do Recife (The River or On the Course of the Capibaribe River from Its Source to the City of Recife)
  • 1960: Dois Parlamentos (Two Parliaments)
  • 1960: Quaderna
  • 1966: A Educação pela Pedra (Education by the Stone)
  • 1975: Museu de Tudo (Museum of Everything)
  • 1980: A Escola das Facas (The School of the Knives)
  • 1985: Agrestes
  • 1987: Crime na Calle Relator (Crime in Relator Street)
  • 1990: Primeiros Poemas (First Poems)
  • 1990: Sevilha Andando (Walking around Seville)

Autos

Further reading

English

  • Education by Stone: Selected Poems / João Cabral de Melo Neto; translated by Richard Zenith, 2005
  • Selected Poetry, 1937-1990 / João Cabral de Melo Neto; translated by Djelal Kadir, 1994
  • The Aesthetics of the Object in the Poetry of João Cabral de Melo Neto / Marta Peixoto, 1977
  • The Poem and the Canvas: Pictorial Implications in the Works of João Cabral de Melo Neto / Danilo Pinto Lôbo, 1972
  • João Cabral de Melo Neto / Benedito Nunes, 1971

Portuguese

  • João Cabral de Melo Neto e a Estratégia do Equilíbrio / Stephen Bocskay, 2013
  • João Cabral de Melo Neto : o homem sem alma ; Diário de tudo / José Castello., 2006
  • Tradição e ruptura: João Cabral de Melo Neto em Barcelona, 1947-1950 / Nicolás Fernández-Medina., 2005.
  • Os signos de uma educação : a água e a pedra na poética de João Cabral de Melo Neto / Walter Filho., 2003
  • O poeta e a mídia : Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto / Fábio Lucas., 2002
  • O poema no sistema : a peculiaridade do antilírico João Cabral na poesia brasileira / Homero Araújo., 2002
  • João Cabral e o poema dramático, Auto do frade / Níobe Abreu Peixoto., 2001
  • João Cabral de Melo Neto / João Alexandre Barbosa., 2001
  • A poesia crítica de João Cabral de Melo Neto / Helton Gonçalves de Souza., 1999
  • João Cabral : a poesia do menos e outros ensaios cabralinos / Antonio Carlos Secchin., 1999
  • João Cabral de Melo Neto : o homem sem alma / José Castello., 1996
  • A bailadora andaluza : a explosão do sagrado na poesia de João Cabral / Waldecy Tenório., 1996
  • João Cabral em perspectiva / Maria do Carmo Campos., 1995
  • Lira e antilira : Mário, Drummond, Cabral / Luiz Costa Lima., 1995
  • Manuel e João : dois poetas pernambucanos / Assis Brasil., 1990
  • Idéias fixas de João Cabral de Melo Neto / Félix de Athayde., 1998
  • A Viagem ou Itinerário que fez João Cabral de Melo Neto do Racionalismo ao Materialismo Dialético / Félix de Athayde., 2000

Spanish

  • Piedra fundamental : poesia y prosa / João Cabral de Melo Neto., 2002
  • A la medida de la mano / Angel Crespo., 1994

References

  1. 1 2 ""João Cabral de Melo Neto, Biografia"". Academia Brasileira de Letras (in Portuguese). Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  2. 1 2 ""João Cabral de Melo Neto"". Lúcia Gaspar (in Portuguese). 28 August 2009. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  3. ""Poesia Concreta e Visual"". Casa do Bruxo. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  4. A poesia não é fruto de inspiração em razão do sentimento”, mas o “fruto do trabalho paciente e lúcido do poeta”. Quoted in: http://www.reciclazaro.org.br/conheca-a-historia-do-poeta-brasileiro-joao-cabral-de-melo-neto/
  5. "Pode-se dizer que ele não tem antecedentes na poesia brasileira, a obra dele tem conseqüentes. Porque é a poesia concreta que vai manter, continuar, expandir e levar para outros caminhos essa linhagem de uma poesia não sentimental, de uma poesia objetiva, uma poesia de concretude, uma poesia crítica, como é a poesia de João." Quoted in: ""Poesia Concreta e Visual"". Casa do Bruxo. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
Academic offices
Preceded by
Assis Chateaubriand

Occupant of the 37th chair of the
Brazilian Academy of Letters

1968–1999
Succeeded by
Ivan Junqueira
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