D. Narcisa de Villar

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D. Narcisa de Villar
AuthorAna Luísa de Azevedo Castro
CountryBrazil
LanguagePortuguese
GenreIndianist romance
Published1859
PublisherTipografia de Francisco de Paula Brito
ISBN9788586501210 (5th edition)
OCLC8106607279
LC ClassPQ9697.A1 D6

D. Narcisa de Villar: Legenda do tempo colonial (Portuguese for 'Mrs. Narcisa de Villar: A Story of Colonial Times') is a novel by Ana Luísa de Azevedo Castro [pt], first published as a book in 1859. Castro published it pseudonymously as Indígena do Ipiranga (Portuguese for 'Ipirangan Indigenous Person').[1] Before its release as a novel, the work was serialized in A marmota, a newspaper published in the state of Rio de Janeiro.[2]

The novel concerns the star-crossed romance between a Portuguese girl and Indigenous boy in colonial Brazil.[3] Matthews describes the work as Indianist;[4] Andreta and Alós note, similarly, that the work evinces a preference for the Indigenous peoples in Brazil over conquistadors.[5] De Alencar argues that it represents a precursor to modernism in Brazilian literature.[6] Wasserman compares it to the French novels Paul et Virginie (1788) and Atala (1801), as well as to the works of Brazilian writer José de Alencar such as O Guarani (1857)although she notes that, unlike O Guarani, D. Narcisa de Villar does not "complicate moral matters" by describing Indigenous people in negative terms or Portuguese colonialists in positive terms.[3]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Mota, Isabela; Pamplona, Patricia (20 March 2020). Vestígios da Paisagem Carioca: 50 lugares desaparecidos do Rio de Janeiro (in Portuguese). Mauad Editora. p. 154. ISBN 978-85-304-0029-3.
  2. ^ Wasserman 2007, pp. 22–23.
  3. ^ a b Wasserman 2007, p. 23.
  4. ^ Matthews, Charlotte Hammond (2012). Gender, Race, and Patriotism in the Works of Nísia Floresta. Tamesis Books. p. 91. ISBN 978-1-85566-235-3.
  5. ^ Andreta & Alós 2014, p. 102.
  6. ^ de Alencar 2008, p. 65.

Sources[edit]