Oswald de Andrade

Brazilian author
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Also known as: José Oswald de Sousa Andrade
Quick Facts
In full:
José Oswald De Sousa Andrade
Born:
Jan. 11, 1890, São Paulo, Brazil
Died:
Oct. 22, 1954, São Paulo (aged 64)
Notable Works:
“Pau-Brasil”
Movement / Style:
Antropofagia
Modernismo
Notable Family Members:
spouse Tarsila do Amaral

Oswald de Andrade (born Jan. 11, 1890, São Paulo, Brazil—died Oct. 22, 1954, São Paulo) was a poet, playwright, and novelist, social agitator and revolutionary, one of the leaders of Brazil’s Modernist movement in the arts.

Born into a wealthy and aristocratic family, Andrade traveled extensively in Europe during his youth and there became aware of avant-garde literary trends in Paris and Italy. After his return to São Paulo, where he received his degree in law in 1919, he and Mário de Andrade (no relation) helped organize the Semana de Arte Moderna (“Week of Modern Art”) at São Paulo in 1922, to introduce the Modernist movement to the public.

Focusing specifically on the nationalistic aspects of Modernism, Andrade, in his literary manifesto Pau-Brasil (1925; “Brazil Wood”), called for a rejection of Portuguese social and literary artifice and a return to what he saw as the primitive spontaneity of expression of the indigenous Brazilians, emphasizing the need for modern Brazil to become aware of its own heritage. To this end, he founded the literary movement known as Antropofagia (“Cannibalism”), a splinter group of Modernism, which, although short-lived, proved influential in its emphasis on folklore and native themes.

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry
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Intent on bringing about social as well as literary reform in Brazil, Andrade joined the Communist Party in 1931 but left it, disillusioned, in 1945. He remained a controversial figure for his radical political views and his often belligerent outspokenness.

In the years after his death, his novels, especially Memórias Sentimentais de João Miramar (1924; “Sentimental Memoirs of João Miramar”), came to be appreciated for their originality of style, rather than solely for their ideological or historical significance.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.