CALL FOR PAPERS ALETRIA - v. 35, n. 4 (out. - dez. 2025) Dossier: Eduardo Lourenço, Brazil, and the Unthought Colonial
In the work of the Portuguese thinker Eduardo Lourenço, there is a remarkable and relatively little-studied reflection on Brazil. When he arrived in Bahia to teach in 1958-1959, the ruined vestiges of the colonial empire in the Northeast moved him deeply. He became friends with Glauber Rocha and saw, through the distance that exile offered, the situation in Europe and the abandonment of colonial projects. Lourenço observed, from afar, Algeria and France, and at that moment, he began to question Africa, anticipating, to a great extent, what would happen in the Colonial War in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau, writing texts that we would come to know under the heading of Cultural Studies decades later.
The aim of this issue, far from attempting to synthesize a thought that vehemently defends heterodoxy, is to highlight, in the work of this writer, the unique experience as a reader and critic of Brazilian literature. For seven decades, from 1945 to 2016, he thought and wrote about Brazil from different perspectives: language, cinema, and literature. However, in his honorary doctorate speech at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) in 1995, he commented that, upon reviewing his trajectory and bibliography, the place of Brazil seemed empty to him.
We invite the academic community to reflect together on two unthoughts that haunt, while simultaneously weaving, the thought of Eduardo Lourenço: the unthought colonial and the unthought Salazarist, and their profound connections to understanding the "problem" of Portugal and the "mystery" of Brazil.
Organizers:
Sabrina Sedlmayer (Federal University of Minas Gerais)
Margarida Calafate Ribeiro (University of Coimbra)
Roberto Vecchi (University of Bologna)
Deadline for submission of proposals: March 04th, 2025
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