Description
Saudades do Brasil
A Photographic Memoir
Claude Lévi-Strauss Translated from the French by Sylvia Modelski
- $29.95s paperback (9780295975665) Add to Cart
- hardcover not available
- Published: 1995
- Subject Listing: Anthropology
Photography
- Bibliographic information: 224 pp., 186 duotone photos, 6 drawings, map
- Series: Naomi B. Pascal Editor's Endowment
- Contents
"The 180 photographs gathered here all relate to South America . . . a testimonial . . . to Brazil and its people more than half a century ago, to whom-as well as to my distant youth-I address a friendly and nostalgic salute."-Claude Lévi-Strauss
Claude Lévi-Strauss, internationally known as a brilliant and sometimes controversial anthropologist, is also a skilled and sensitive photographer. Saudades do Brasil-"nostalgia for Brazil," from the title of a musical composition by Darius Milhaud-presents 180 of the more than 3,000 photographs Lévi-Strauss took in Brazil between 1935 and 1939. While serving as professor of sociology at the University of S‹o Paulo, the young ethnographer made expeditions among the natives of Mato Grosso and Southern Amazonia that resulted in numerous publications, most notably Tristes Tropiques. Most of these photographs are published here for the first time.
Lévi-Strauss begins his photographic memoir in S‹o Paulo, then a frontier city rapidly changing to an industrial metropolis, a city with "a singular beauty, due to breaks in rhythm, architectural paradoxes, contrasting shapes and colors." The rest of the photographs chronicle Lévi-Strauss's expeditions among the Caduveo, the Bororo, the Nambikwara, and other tribes-"the last escapees from the cataclysm that discovery and subsequent invasions had been for their ancestors." His pictures capture the Amazonian landscape, the people, and their activities, social lives, and ceremonies. Informative captions by Lévi-Strauss enhance the ethnographic and human interest of his photographs.
Saudades do Brasil will be of interest to anthropologists, photographers, and readers concerned with a part of the world that is geographically remote but globally significant.
Reviews
"In the mid-1930s, a young French ethnographer named Claude Lévi-Strauss ventured by rail, truck, canoe, and horseback into the Brazilian interior to document the cultural habits of tribal groups whosenumbers and customs were still somewhat protected by their relative isolation. . . . [He] created a rare visual record of archery contests, funeral rites, face painting, and other traditional customs."-New York Times Book Review
"It's a pity 'magic' is a word gone out of fashion with anthropologists; one could hardly find a better one to describe the effect of Claude Lévi-Strauss's Saudades do Brasil. . . . In spite of his spectacular pictures of the magnificent drama of Bororo funerals, the general mood conveyed by these photographs is one of stillness: the tranquil streets of suburban Sao Paulo; the dormant colonial market towns of the interior; the radiant and enigmatic designs on Caduveo women's faces; the tender, calm abandon of the Nambikwara compose an essential picture of time arrested, and time lost."-London Observer