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==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br/index.php/content/view/full/1877 Downloadable version of the book] {{pt icon}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090527141809/http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br:80/index.php/content/view/full/1877 Downloadable version of the book] {{pt icon}}


{{wikisourcelang|pt|A Carne}}
{{wikisourcelang|pt|A Carne}}

Revision as of 13:20, 1 October 2016

A Carne
AuthorJúlio Ribeiro
LanguageBrazilian Portuguese
PublisherTeixeira & Irmão
Publication date
1888
Publication placeBrazil
Media typeHardcover

A Carne (in English: The Flesh) is a 1888 Naturalist novel by Júlio Ribeiro. It is one of the most polemical works of the Brazilian literature, being frequently compared and considered as a forerunner to D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover.

Plot

Lenita is a young, naïve 22-year-old woman who, recently orphaned, goes to live with an old farmer who raised her father. In the farmer's house, she meets his son, Manuel Barbosa, a divorced man. They soon start a forbidden love relationship.

Criticism

A Carne has themes considered to be "strong" for the time it was released (the 19th century), such as divorce and heavy eroticism, among others. Many people have negatively reviewed the romance, such as José Veríssimo and Alfredo Pujol. The most vehement critic was the priest Sena Freitas, who wrote an article entitled A Carniça (English: The Carrion) for the famous newspaper Diário Mercantil, for which the book's author, Júlio Ribeiro, also worked. Ribeiro refuted Freitas' critiques in the articles O Urubu Sena Freitas (English: Sena Freitas, the Vulture). Freitas' and Ribeiro's articles were compiled and published posthumously in 1934 under the title Uma Polêmica Célebre (English: A Famous Polemic).

Ribeiro once said, referring to his position:

Of the polemics I have offended, any one of them was caused by me. I don't know how to attack; I only know how to defend myself — how to retaliate.

Adaptations

The novel was adapted into an eponymous film in 1975. Directed by J. Marreco, it starred Selma Egrei, Newton Prado and Geraldo Del Rey. Unlike the book however, it was not a polemical film, since it was made during the "pornochanchada" period.

References