Title: Brazilian Literary Criticism and Historiography
Abstract: In Brazil literary studies, after scant manifestations in the colonial period, represented by the activity of literary academies founded in the 18th century only really expanded in the course of the 19th century. National literary production grew in quantity and quality, as did literary studies, which, on the one hand, were demanded by this production—that, after all, needed to be studied and evaluated—, but, on other hand, stimulated this creativity, as they established as a criterion of value the alignment of fiction, poetry and dramaturgy with the nationalist agenda. As a result, from the 1820s until the 1880s, literary studies in Brazil underwent a period of expansion and diversification. If in the 1800s literary education was conducted at high-school level, from the 1930s onwards university courses in literatures began to be established in Brazil. In this paper we will provide a short introduction to Brazilian literary criticism and historiography from its very beginnings to the present time.
Keywords: Brazilian literary criticism, Brazilian Literary historiography
Author: Roberto Acízelo de Souza, Professor, Institute of Letters, Rio de Janeiro State University, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; José Luís Jobim, Professor, Institute of Letters, Federal Fluminense University, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.