Description
A timely and beautifully written cultural history of Rio de Janeiro Captures a moment of transition in the city destined to host the next Olympic Games and World Cup Ranges widely across literature, architecture, art, history and music.
About the Author
Bruno Carvalho is Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Cultures and George H. and Mildred F. Whitfield University Preceptor in the Humanities at Princeton University.
Reviews
Reviews 'Every page bursts with insights... This is a wonderfully erudite but also congenial work, inviting the reader to a deeper understanding of Rio de Janeiro's history over the past centuries through close investigation of the neighborhood of Cidade Nova, its changing population and architecture, and the many works of literature, visual arts, and popular song connected to those histories. A groundbreaking perspective on Rio's history.'
Bryan McCann
'This brilliant cultural history of Rio de Janeiro, while focusing on the specific neighborhood of Cidade Nova, is anything but insular in its methodology and scope. Drawing on a dazzling array of sources-- urban theories, literature, painting, popular music and film, but also city plans, censuses, oral testimonies, memoirs, letters and travel accounts--Bruno Carvalho offers incisive readings of texts, including canonical ones. His argument for Rio de Janeiro as a porous city, defined by social and racial mixtures and cultural inclusions, proposes the concept of porosity over others, such as syncretism or miscegenation, the better to keep in sight ways in which those mixtures can coexist and even abet other forms of discrimination and exclusion. Lively, judicious, and erudite, Porous City makes a fundamental contribution to debates about urban modernism and cultural formations, of interest to both beginning and seasoned scholars of Brazil and Latin America. It asks a still open question, pertinent since the nineteenth century: "How does a culture and self-image defined by mixture coexist with stark socio-economic disparity?'
Marta Peixoto
'Bruno Carvalho's Porous City: A Cultural History of Rio de Janeiro makes a significant contribution to the understanding of Rio's ''multi-ethnic, multiracial, and multilayered''.'
Rosana Barbosa, Canadian Journal of History
'Bruno Carvalho's Porous City helps readers see Rio anew through his meticulously researched microhistory of Cidade Nova, the once culturally vibrant carioca neighbourhood where samba was born. As this masterful study bears out, Cidade Nova is a fascinating microcosm for examining certain paradoxes that have come to define Rio, and Brazil more generally, particularly the co-existence of the celebration of racial mixture and the persistence of dramatic racial inequality.'
Rebecca J. Atencio, Bulletin of Spanish Studies
'Bruno Carvalho's Porous City: A Cultural History of Rio de Janeiro is a highly recommended read for those with a moderate-to-strong foundation in Brazilian history and culture, and its chapters could serve as useful supplemental material for the graduate classroom. The author does a fine job of moving at an appropriate pace, and his conclusions never seem hastily formulated or exaggerated. Most of all, the considerable research that has gone into the work is commendable and offers plenty of jumping off points for those who would seek to build upon Carvalho's reading of porosity.' Andrew Frederick Milacci, Middle Atlantic Review of Latin American Studies
Awards
Winner of Roberto Reis Prize of the Brazilian Studies Association 2014 (United States).
Book Information
ISBN 9781781381649
Author Bruno Carvalho
Format Paperback
Page Count 240
Imprint Liverpool University Press
Publisher Liverpool University Press