Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature

Despite the trend, particularly since the new millennium, of novels describing Brazilians travelling abroad or even set outside the country’s borders, and despite the evidence from official sources and ethnographic fieldwork that proves large numbers of Brazilians have been migrating in waves since...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Williams, C
Other Authors: Brandellero, S
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2020
_version_ 1811139964457451520
author Williams, C
author2 Brandellero, S
author_facet Brandellero, S
Williams, C
author_sort Williams, C
collection OXFORD
description Despite the trend, particularly since the new millennium, of novels describing Brazilians travelling abroad or even set outside the country’s borders, and despite the evidence from official sources and ethnographic fieldwork that proves large numbers of Brazilians have been migrating in waves since the 1980s, there is a distinct lack of representation of illegal migrants to other countries in contemporary Brazilian literature. With particular attention to narrative style, this chapter discusses works by Regina Rheda, Claudia Canto and Luiz Ruffato which foreground undocumented Brazilian migrants’ experiences of working conditions, survival, avoiding the authorities and acculturation in the face of prejudice and stereotypes. The texts studied describe living in London in the early 1990s (Rheda), before a Brazilian ex-pat community had established itself and Lisbon in the 2000s (Canto and Ruffato), where Brazilians now make up half the migrant population.
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:14:27Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:d002e840-525d-4d1d-800b-bca657126c7e
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:14:27Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Routledge
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:d002e840-525d-4d1d-800b-bca657126c7e2024-07-12T10:58:42ZSomething to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literatureBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:d002e840-525d-4d1d-800b-bca657126c7eEnglishSymplectic ElementsRoutledge2020Williams, CBrandellero, SPardue, DWink, GDespite the trend, particularly since the new millennium, of novels describing Brazilians travelling abroad or even set outside the country’s borders, and despite the evidence from official sources and ethnographic fieldwork that proves large numbers of Brazilians have been migrating in waves since the 1980s, there is a distinct lack of representation of illegal migrants to other countries in contemporary Brazilian literature. With particular attention to narrative style, this chapter discusses works by Regina Rheda, Claudia Canto and Luiz Ruffato which foreground undocumented Brazilian migrants’ experiences of working conditions, survival, avoiding the authorities and acculturation in the face of prejudice and stereotypes. The texts studied describe living in London in the early 1990s (Rheda), before a Brazilian ex-pat community had established itself and Lisbon in the 2000s (Canto and Ruffato), where Brazilians now make up half the migrant population.
spellingShingle Williams, C
Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title_full Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title_fullStr Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title_full_unstemmed Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title_short Something to declare: illegal immigrants in contemporary Brazilian literature
title_sort something to declare illegal immigrants in contemporary brazilian literature
work_keys_str_mv AT williamsc somethingtodeclareillegalimmigrantsincontemporarybrazilianliterature