Home | Books By Year | Books from 1980


The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers

Buy The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the book. And once you've experienced the book, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers' (Portuguese: 'A Tragdia da Rua das Flores') is a novel by Jos Maria de Ea de Queirs (1845 - 1900), also known as Ea de Queiroz. It was only first published in Portuguese in 1980. The first English version, translated by Margaret Jull Costa, was published by Dedalus Books in 2000, to coincide with the centenary of the authors death.

Background



This novel was written between 1877 and 1878 in Newcastle upon Tyne, where Ea was the Portuguese Consul. It was discovered amongst his papers after his death and remained unpublished for more than one hundred years, only being published in 1980 after copyrights expired. It is possible that the writer's family refused to publish the book earlier due to the fact that an incestuous relationship is the dominant feature of the story.

For some commentators the novel was designed to serve as an outline for the authors novel 'The Maias', as it contains resemblances between characters and events described; for others it has been seen as a draft for his novel 'Cousin Bazilio'.

The Plot



The narrative focuses on the beautiful Joaquina (later known as Genoveva) who leaves her husband and child in Portugal and flees with a Spaniard to Spain, where she becomes a courtesan, eventually marrying a French Senator and moving to Paris. With the fall of Napoleon Bonaparte and the death of the husband, she returns to Lisbon where she attracts considerable attention both for her beauty and because of her mysterious history. She becomes a paid mistress of the unattractive, but rich, Dmaso while, at the same time, falling in love with a young man called Vtor da Silva. Only after their love has been consummated does she learn that she is Vitors mother, and this leads to her suicide so that Vitor will not discover the truth.

Reviews and analysis



While considered a fairly unpolished work that may not have been regarded by the author as his final version, the reviews have noted the high quality of the English translation. However, several commentators express surprise that, in her Introduction to the novel, the translator gives away the plot.

Although the story is tragic, the book is primarily a satirical portrait of 19th-century Lisbon society, a feature common to most of Eas work. It has been described as a fascinating visit to a period with a very different approach to morality, and as having beautiful descriptions of 19th century Portuguese life with a huge amount of satire and societal critique layered thick on top. A strong vein of both comedy and tragedy runs throughout, while Eca "delights in shocking in order to expose the puritanical, narrow-minded Portuguese society".



The satire begins early in the novel, when Genoveva throws a party. This allows Ea to describe typical characters from Lisbon society. The influence of the founder of Literary realism, Honor de Balzac (1799-1850), author of novels that depict Parisian society, can be detected. Particularly amusing is Camilo, a pretentious artist, full of talk but little action, who goes on and on about art history and styles and technique, but never paints anything. Ea brilliantly dissects a world in which only surface counts, providing the reader with a vivid and gripping portrayal of a society and class consumed by hypocrisy, greed and materialism.

Several writers have explored the role of incest in Eas works. Ponte notes that in Greek Tragedy incest represented the protagonists hopeless fight against fate. As an allegory for social decadence incest is found elsewhere in nineteenth-century literature, most notably in mile Zolas La Cure. In her Introduction to the book, the translator suggests that this could have been one reason why the book was neither published by Ea nor his heirs, speculating that the incidents described were too close to home. Ea was born illegitimately and although his parents did eventually marry he lived apart from them until he was 21. In 'The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers', Vtor first sees his mother when he is 23.

Film adaptation



In 1981, the book was adapted for a Portuguese television series, titled 'Homnimo', directed by Ferro Katzenstein.

References



Category:Novels by Jos Maria de Ea de Queiroz

Category:Portuguese novels adapted into films

Category:1980 novels

Category:Novels set in Portugal

Category:20th-century Portuguese novels

Category:Novels published posthumously

Buy The Tragedy of the Street of Flowers now from Amazon

<-- Return to books from 1980



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1071399042.