Manifesto anti-Dantas e por extenso by José de Almada Negreiros
Okay, so 'plot' isn't really the right word here. This isn't a novel. It's a weapon. In 1915, a young, fiery artist named Almada Negreiros got fed up. The Portuguese cultural scene felt like a museum, and a critic named Júlio Dantas was its chief curator. Almada saw Dantas as the symbol of everything boring, traditional, and holding Portugal back from modern art and ideas.
The Story
So, what did he do? He wrote this manifesto. It's a wild, free-flowing piece that mixes insults, satire, poetry, and sheer artistic rebellion. He doesn't just criticize Dantas; he mocks him, mimics his style to show how empty it is, and calls for a complete artistic revolution. The whole thing is a performance, a public challenge thrown at the feet of the old guard. It’s about breaking rules, laughing at authority, and saying, 'We’re here, we’re new, and you don’t get to tell us what art is.'
Why You Should Read It
You should read it because it’s alive. Even today, over a century later, its energy jumps off the page. It’s funny, it’s rude, and it’s incredibly brave. It captures that moment when a young person looks at the world they’ve inherited and decides to smash it to build something better. It’s not about being 'right' in a scholarly way; it’s about the raw, messy, and vital feeling of rebellion. Reading it feels like getting a shot of creative adrenaline.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for anyone who loves art history, modernism, or just a good story about an underdog shaking things up. If you enjoy manifestos like the Futurist writings or just want to see how a single pamphlet can help kickstart a cultural movement, you’ll love this. It’s short, powerful, and a brilliant reminder that art should never play it safe.
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Amanda Thompson
2 years agoNot bad at all.