Atlantida (Portuguese magazine)

Atlantida: mensário artístico, literário e social para Portugal e Brasil (Portuguese for "Atlantis") was a magazine published in Portugal and Brazil from 1915 to 1920.[1] The magazine was headed by João de Barros and João do Rio,[2] to promote the proximity between the two countries. These proximities between "sister nations" occupy a central theme of the magazine during First World War, here portrayed as an "adequate moment to create ties between the two states, based on race, traditions and common history, and the notion of latinity", and also, between Portuguese and Brazilian cultures, in their multiple forms of expression.[1]

Atlantida
Staff writersLuís de Montalvor
CategoriesCultural magazine
Founded1915
Final issue1920
CountryPortugal
Brazil
LanguagePortuguese

As collaborators in this project were the names of Augusto Casimiro, Guerra Junqueiro, Jaime Cortesão, José de Campos Pereira, José de Macedo e Teófilo Braga on what concerns the conflict between 1914 and 1918; Agostinho de Campos, António Carneiro Leão, Barbosa de Magalhães, Delfim Santos, João de Barros, João de Deus Ramos, Leonardo Coimbra and Lúcio dos Santos under education and teaching; José de Figueiredo and Aquilino Ribeiro as an art critic; Avelino de Almeida in theater; Joaquim Manso and Júlio Brandão in literature; Humberto Avelar in music. Other names were Camilo Pessanha, Delfim Guimarães, Fausto Guedes Teixeira, Afonso Lopes Vieira and Henrique de Vasconcelos. "Atlantida" had as its correspondent director in Paris Graça Aranha, who announced collaborations with Camille Mauclair, Edmond Jaloux, Gaston Riou and François de Miomande.

In the area of plastic arts, Atlantida reprinted in its pages pictures and styles by Alberto de Sousa, Almada Negreiros, António Carneiro, António Soares, Columbano Bordalo Pinheiro, João Vaz, José Malhoa, José Pacheko, Mário Navarro da Costa, Raul Lino, Soares dos Reis and Veloso Salgado. It is also worth highlighting other contributions by Gabriele d'Annunzio, Guilherme Ferrero and Salomon Reinach.[3]

References

  1. Silvana Fernandes Lopes (2012). "Atlantida" Magazine: elementary education in Portugal and Brazil in the early decades of the twentieth century". Rev. Lusófona de Educaçãol (20). Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  2. Gutemberg Medeiros (2016). "100 years of Atlantida: a continent of letters of Brazil and Portugal". Galáxia (São Paulo) (32). Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  3. Correia, Rita (19 February 2008). "Historic file: Atlantida: mensário artístico, literário e social para Portugal e Brasil (1915-1920)" (PDF) (in Portuguese). Hemeroteca Municipal de Lisboa. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2014., in pdf


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