The Door Ajar: Adilia Lopes and the Art of Approximation

2016; Linguagem: Inglês

10.62791/cx83h872

ISSN

2573-1432

Autores

Rachel Rothenberg,

Tópico(s)

Spanish Literature and Culture Studies

Resumo

Abstract: A self-declared “pop-poetess,” Adília Lopes has gained recognition in recent years in both literary and pop-cultural spheres, publishing fifteen books since 1985, contributing constantly to Portuguese periodicals, and making frequent television appearances. Lopes is not only an influential contemporary poet, but a public figure whose pseudonym holds both the weight of her written work and the attributes of the persona that she has created in the public eye. Perhaps it is due to her extreme visibility in the media, her absolute candor—whether in writing poems that address her literary influences or revealing the details of her personal life on the latest permutation of reality television—that she is so often taken at face value. Much of the critical attention afforded her is aimed at her reliance upon satirical allusion, word games, and shock value, as the polemic nature of her poems often outshines their actual intentions. This paper seeks to demonstrate that Lopes should not be taken lightly, that despite the initial response that Lopes’s poems incite, a deliberate, ambitious voice emerges from the body of her work. Within the bounds of her poems, Adília Lopes lucidly defines her relationship to Portuguese and international literary continuities while presenting a meticulously formulated aesthetic in which instances of deferred resolution come to define a process of approximation that holds greater value than any anticipated conclusion.

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