Today's Birthdays

one click shows all of today's celebrity birthdays

Browse All Birthdays

43,625    Actors
27,931    Actresses
4,867    Composers
7,058    Directors
842    Footballers
221    Racing drivers
925    Singers
9,111    Writers

Get FamousLikeMe on your website
One line of code gets FamousLikeMe on your website. Find out more.

Subscribe to Daily updates


Add to Google

privacy policy



Famous Like Me > Writer > L > Monteiro Lobato

Profile of Monteiro Lobato on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Monteiro Lobato  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 18th April 1882
   
Place of Birth: Taubaté, São Paulo, Brazil
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
This article is about the Brazilian writer. For the place in São Paulo, Brazil, named after him, see Monteiro Lobato, São Paulo.

José Bento Monteiro Lobato (Taubaté, São Paulo, April 18, 1882; São Paulo, São Paulo, July 4, 1948) was one of Brazil's most influential writers.

Works

Lobato is best known for a set of educational but entertaining children's books, which comprise about half of his production. The other half, consisting of a number of novels and short tales for adult readers, was less popular but marked a watershed in Brazilian literature.

The writer, surrounded by some of his criatures

Most of his children books were set in the Sítio do Picapau Amarelo ("Ranch of the Yellow Woodpecker"), a small farm in the Brazilian countryside, and featured the elderly ranch owner Dona Benta, her grandchildren Narizinho ("Little Nose") and Pedrinho ("Little Peter") and the colored servant and cook Tia Nastácia ("Aunt Nastácia"). These real characters were complemented by entities created or animated by the children's imagination: the irreverent doll Emília and the aristocratic corncob puppet Visconde, the pig Rabicó and the rhinoceros Quindim, Saci Pererê (a black, pipe-smoking, one-legged character of Brazilian Folklore) and Cuca (a evil monster invoked by Brazilian mothers at night to convince their kids to go to bed). However the adventures mostly develop elsewhere: either in fantasy worlds invented by the children, or in stories told by Dona Benta in evening sessions. These three universes are deftly intertwined so that the stories or myths told by the grandmother naturally become the setting for make-believe play, punctuated by routine farm events.

Many of these books are educational in a gentle and entertaining way, teaching things through the mouth of Dona Benta and by smart questions and remarks, some impertinent, some savvy, by her small and attentive audience. They addressed subjects which children normally do not like at school, such as mathematics, grammar, world history, geography, astronomy, Greek mythology, and so on. In other books, the author, who was a skeptic, a rationalist, an internationalist and had anti-war positions (but at the same time being strongly patriotic and conservative), passes his views on the world, humanity and politics to his children readers. In other books, he tells in a charming and easy to understand way the classics of literature, such as Aesop's fables, Don Quijote and Peter Pan. Thus, it is quite possible that hundreds of thousands of marveled children who read his stories were influenced towards earnest study, the love of reading, serious careers and world views that reflected Lobato's. He was widely imaginative, such as in his books A Chave do Tamanho ("The Sizing Switch") and A Reforma da Natureza ("Reforming Nature"), where he speculated on the consequences of all humans suddenly decreasing in size (thus predating the motion picture Honey, I Shrunk the Kids), and on what would happen if Emilia and Visconde would get hold of a scientific method to change the genes of animals and plants for rational or irrational purposes, with catastrophic results (thus, eerily predicting the current controversy on genetic engineering — this was written in 1939!).

The children's tales were turned into widely popular TV programs, including four series of Sitio do Picapau Amarelo adventures, one in the 1950s, another in the 1970s, and the two last in the 1990s (the last one is still running on Rede Globo). Several generations of Brazilian children were hooked and educated by his marvelous stories, which seems never to lose currency.

Lobato was also a influential journalist and publisher and wrote regularly for several newspapers and magazines, and was a noted and respected art critic. In fact, he provoked a public controversy when he harshly criticized the writers, poets, painters and musicians, who, in 1922 promoted a Modern Art Week (Semana da Arte Moderna), which was also a watershed event in Brazilian culture in the 20th century. In 1919, he acquired the Revista do Brasil, one of the first Brazilian cultural magazines, and founded, in 1920, his own publishing house. Later, he helped to found and was a partner in two of the most important independent Brazilian publishing houses, the Companhia Nacional and the Editora Brasiliense.

Politically, Lobato was strongly in favor of a state monopoly for iron and oil exploration in Brazil and battled publicly for it between 1931 and 1939. For his libertarian views, he was arrested by the then dictatorial government of Getúlio Dornelles Vargas in 1941. This movement, called O Petróleo é Nosso (The Oil Belongs to Us) was highly successful, and the same Getúlio Vargas, now a democratically elected president, created Petrobras in 1952.

Children books

  • A Menina do Nariz Arrebitado (1920)
  • Reinações de Narizinho (1931)
  • Viagem ao Céu and O Saci (1932)
  • Caçadas de Pedrinho and Hans Staden (1933)
  • História do Mundo para as Crianças (1933)
  • Memórias da Emília and Peter Pan (1936)
  • Emília no País da Gramática and Aritmética da Emília (1934)
  • Geografia de Dona Benta (1935)
  • Serões de Dona Benta and História das invenções (1937)
  • D. Quixote das Crianças (1936)
  • O Poço do Visconde (1937)
  • Histórias de tia Nastácia (1937)
  • O Picapau Amarelo and A Reforma da Natureza (1939)
  • O Minotauro (1937)
  • A Chave do Tamanho (1942)
  • Fábulas (1942?)
  • Os Doze Trabalhos de Hércules (2 vols) (1944)

Adult books

  • Urupês
  • Cidades Mortas
  • Negrinha
  • Idéias de Jeca Tatu
  • A Onda Verde and O Presidente Negro
  • Na Antevéspera
  • O Escândalo do Petróleo and Ferro
  • Mr. Slang e o Brasil and Problema Vital
  • América
  • Mundo da Lua and Miscelânea
  • A Barca de Gleyre (2 vols)

Collected prefaces, interviews, articles and correspondence

  • Prefácios e entrevistas
  • Literatura do Minarete (*)
  • Conferências, artigos e crônicas (*)
  • Cartas escolhidas (2 vols) (*)
  • Críticas e outras Notas (*)
  • Cartas de Amor (*)

(*) Published posthumously.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Monteiro Lobato