DAWNS OF FREEDOM: ANALYSES OF ANTISLAVERY DISCOURSES IN BRAZILIAN ROMANTIC FICTION (1850-1870)

Authors

  • Gabriel Antônio Prechlak Universidade Federal do Paraná

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i2.18303

Keywords:

Anti-slavery. Brazilian Literature. Race. Nation.

Abstract

This article analyzes the antislavery discourses in Brazilian Romantic prose between 1850 and 1870, exploring how literature reflected and influenced issues of race, nation, and slavery. Although Romantic prose historically marginalized the Black figure in its representations, unlike the Indigenous, some authors, such as Nísia Floresta (1855), Pinheiro Guimarães (1856), and Joaquim Manuel de Macedo (1869), questioned the continuity of slavery, its vices, and contradictions. Antislavery, however, took on various forms of critique of the institution and the representation of the enslaved, highlighting concerns about the viability of a national project in light of the massive presence of freed Africans. The discourses analyzed reveal the deep anxieties of an elite more concerned with racial homogenization and tensions than with the humanitarian cause of emancipation.

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Author Biography

Gabriel Antônio Prechlak, Universidade Federal do Paraná

Mestrando em História pela Universidade Federal do Paraná (UFPR).

Published

2025-02-28

How to Cite

Prechlak, G. A. (2025). DAWNS OF FREEDOM: ANALYSES OF ANTISLAVERY DISCOURSES IN BRAZILIAN ROMANTIC FICTION (1850-1870). Revista Ibero-Americana De Humanidades, Ciências E Educação, 11(2), 2628–2644. https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i2.18303