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Item Filologia da civilização brasileira: a proposta de Afonso Arinos de Melo Franco(2010-06) Serpa, Elio Cantalicio; Campigoto, José AdilçonAfonso Arinos de Mello Franco´s state- ments about the Brazilian civilization conduct this text. The book named Concept of Brazilian Civilization, published in 1936, is the main historical source used. Although provisory, we have denominated Arinos´s work as “philology of Brazil”, because of the starting point adopted by the author, who regarded the coeval Brazilian intellectuality, the fundamental interlocutor of his reflections, as “obscure and without complexity”, and his time as a moment of “intellectual disorder”. Arinos set himself the task of eliminating those misunderstandings through conceptual re-elaborations in a political perspective settled in the Empire time, as well as ru- led by a meaning of uniting the cultural diversity.Item Oliveira Martins e Afonso Arinos: regiões e tragicidades(2012-12) Campigoto, José Adilçon; Serpa, Elio CantalícioIn this research about the themes of region and tragedy in texts published in Portugal and in Brazil in the 19th and 20th century, we selected a number of works written by two authors: Oliveira Martins and Afonso Arinos. The adopted tools to accomplish this research were taken from the field of philosophical hermeneutics, in the attempt to perceive the movement that these interpreters of Brazil and Portugal undertook to understand reality. The book História da civilização ibérica (“History of the Iberian Civilization”) by Oliveira Martins, along with the compilation entitled Notas do Dia (“Notes of the Day”) and the book Lendas e tradições brasileiras (“Brazilian Legends and Traditions”) by Afonso Arinos became our sources. We conclude, among other things, that the Iberian Peninsula is considered in these texts as (geographical, historical and spiritual) totality, and that such scheme was transposed, to some extent, to Arino’s writing about Brazil.Item Portugal no Brasil (1951): regiões brasileiras no olhar da Embaixada Universitária de Coimbra(Universidade Federal de Goiás, 2017-06-27) Serpa, Elio Cantalicio; Campigoto, José AdilçonIn the early 1950s, the University Embassy of Coimbra was established to visit Brazil. Among other objectives, it was about perceiving (and demarcating) the Portuguese presence on this side of the Atlantic. More broadly, the purpose implied to consolidate 'the awareness of the historical greatness of Portugal'. The objectives, as well as the activities, are found in the report published in 1953. This same report was again published in 1954, the 3rd Centenary of the Restoration of Pernambuco. Using the concept of region, this report divided Brazil into two major territories: that of equality / identity with Portugal and that of difference. We assume that such a view was deeply marked by Salazar's historical and political culture, therefore in a perspective averse to modernism. We will try to understand the selection of the presupposed differences, but also, to perceive political issues present in the observation of the so-called expressions of 'lusitanity' and, finally, to identify this look that seems to us nuanced by historical culture. Thus, we will go through the report prepared by Dean Maximino Correia, professor at the Faculty of Medicine of the Coimbra institution, following his organization, however, selecting information.Item Regiões e totalidades nos textos de críticos portugueses sobre escritos de história do Brasil (1942-1968)(2014-06) Serpa, Elio Cantalicio; Schorner, Ancelmo; Campigoto, José AdilçonThe basic assumption for this article is that narratives organize spaces. Thus, this study discusses the relationship between maps and route, region and place, control and diversion, and reflects on critique by shifting the concept of space onto the notion of region. The Portuguese intelligentsia associated with the Language School of Coimba University between 1942 and 1968 produced a considerable amount of critic texts. There is an outstanding set of analy- ses and descriptions of work by Brazilian authors, articles published in the Brasilia magazine, which are discussed here. In its early years, the magazine disseminated, in its critic section, Brazilian intellectual production from the “Double Centenary” celebrations. Such critiques show how the criteria used organize places and constitute regions.