Event Title

Matter and Memory: Reasserting the (Political) Present in Eduardo Coutinho’s Edifício Master (2002) and Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Aquarius (2016)

Location

University at Albany, Humanities 354

Start Date

5-10-2017 1:00 PM

End Date

5-10-2017 2:00 PM

Description

To what extent does recent Brazilian cinema explore individual stories as a way to illustrate the fragmentation of the public sphere in the long aftermath of the vastly ambitious sociopolitical landscapes created by the Cinema Novo movement in the 1960s? Classic transitional films such as Arnaldo Jabôr’s Tudo bem (1978) and Carlos Diegues’s Bye Bye Brasil (1980) depicted a society with shifting priorities, where social utopias were coopted by new forms of national identity emerging from an all-powerful mass media. More importantly, those films showed a move from political responsibility to “neoliberal discourses of responsibilization (Competing Responsibilities, Trnka and Trundle 3) that left little to no room to popular resistance against the forces of global capitalism. From then on, Brazilian cinematic productions (both fiction and documentaries) have largely singled out underdog stories not to further victimize their anonymous subjects but to empower them with a renewed sense of belonging to the (political) present. The aim of this discussion is to argue for a new interpretation of this imaginary in Brazilian cinema through a reading of Eduardo Coutinho’s Edifício Master (2002) and Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Aquarius (2016). Both documentary and fiction film represent, by and large, cultural objects that make ample use of powerful cinematic techniques enacting personal memories to vindicate the underdog’s side of the story. A deconstruction of grand narratives of modernization, effected in both productions, calls for a rethinking of the role played by the underdog, from the oppressed subject living in the Brazilian backlands (a topic of the politically engaged 1960s cinema) to a vulnerable middle class living precariously in contemporary cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Recife.

Speaker Information

Gonzalo Aguiar is an Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at SUNY Oswego. His research on Latin American intellectual history, literature, and theatre has been published in journals such as Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, Latin American Theatre Review, and Hispanic Review. He is currently working on the final stages of a book-length study titled Intelectuales, sociedad civil y campo cultural. Argentina, Brasil y Uruguay (1900-1935). At SUNY Oswego he is also the organizer of the Spanish Colloquium and the Brazilian Film Series, both annual events made in conjunction with his other responsibilities as Faculty Resident Mentor.

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Oct 5th, 1:00 PM Oct 5th, 2:00 PM

Matter and Memory: Reasserting the (Political) Present in Eduardo Coutinho’s Edifício Master (2002) and Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Aquarius (2016)

University at Albany, Humanities 354

To what extent does recent Brazilian cinema explore individual stories as a way to illustrate the fragmentation of the public sphere in the long aftermath of the vastly ambitious sociopolitical landscapes created by the Cinema Novo movement in the 1960s? Classic transitional films such as Arnaldo Jabôr’s Tudo bem (1978) and Carlos Diegues’s Bye Bye Brasil (1980) depicted a society with shifting priorities, where social utopias were coopted by new forms of national identity emerging from an all-powerful mass media. More importantly, those films showed a move from political responsibility to “neoliberal discourses of responsibilization (Competing Responsibilities, Trnka and Trundle 3) that left little to no room to popular resistance against the forces of global capitalism. From then on, Brazilian cinematic productions (both fiction and documentaries) have largely singled out underdog stories not to further victimize their anonymous subjects but to empower them with a renewed sense of belonging to the (political) present. The aim of this discussion is to argue for a new interpretation of this imaginary in Brazilian cinema through a reading of Eduardo Coutinho’s Edifício Master (2002) and Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Aquarius (2016). Both documentary and fiction film represent, by and large, cultural objects that make ample use of powerful cinematic techniques enacting personal memories to vindicate the underdog’s side of the story. A deconstruction of grand narratives of modernization, effected in both productions, calls for a rethinking of the role played by the underdog, from the oppressed subject living in the Brazilian backlands (a topic of the politically engaged 1960s cinema) to a vulnerable middle class living precariously in contemporary cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Recife.