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<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0104-7183</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Horizontes Antropológicos]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Horiz.antropol.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0104-7183</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Programa de Pós-graduação em Antropologia Social - IFCH-UFRGS]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0104-71832010000100003</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Mortuary styles and modes of sociability in nineteenth-century Brazilian cemeteries]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Estilos mortuários e modos de sociabilidade em cemitérios Brasileiros oitocentistas]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Motta]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Antonio]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A">
<institution><![CDATA[,  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
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<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>5</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0104-71832010000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0104-71832010000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0104-71832010000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[The analytical focus of this work is the social treatment meted out to the dead and burial forms in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. How might one read and understand the attitudes and social meanings of a given time from its system of funerary objects, funerary practices and styles? When subjected to the reading, embodied in tombs, the devices and burial styles translate not only accommodations and balances, but also tensions and significant changes in the relationships that the living establish with their dead.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[O que mobiliza o foco de análise deste trabalho é o tratamento social dispensado ao morto e suas formas de enterramento, no final do século XIX e nos primeiros decênios do XX. De que maneira se pode ler e entender atitudes e significados sociais de uma determinada época a partir de um sistema de objetos funerários, de práticas e estilos mortuários? Quando submetidos à leitura, os dispositivos e estilos funerários, plasmados nos túmulos, permitem traduzir não só acomodações e equilíbrios, mas também tensões e mudanças significativas nas relações afetivas que os vivos estabelecem com os seus mortos.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[mortuary styles]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[mortuary scenography]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[funeral architecture]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[mortuary scenography]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[forms of sociability in cemeteries]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[arquitetura funerária]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[cenografias mortuárias]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[estilos mortuários]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[formas de sociabilidade nos cemitérios]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p><font size="4" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Mortuary styles   and modes of sociability in nineteenth-century Brazilian cemeteries</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Estilos mortu&aacute;rios e modos   de sociabilidade em cemit&eacute;rios Brasileiros oitocentistas</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b>Antonio Motta</b></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>Translated by M&oacute;nica Lourdes Franch Guti&eacute;rrez    <br>   Translated from <a href="http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-71832010000100005&lng=pt&nrm=iso" target="_blank"><strong>Horizontes    Antropol&oacute;gicos</strong>,    Porto Alegre, v.16, n. 33, p. 55-80, Jun. 2010.</a></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><b>ABSTRACT</b></p>     <p>The analytical   focus of this work is the social treatment meted out to the dead and burial   forms in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. How might one read   and understand the attitudes and social meanings of a given time from its   system of funerary objects, funerary practices and styles? When subjected to   the reading, embodied in tombs, the devices and burial styles translate not   only accommodations and balances, but also tensions and significant changes in the relationships that the living establish with their dead.</p>     <p><b>Keywords</b>:   mortuary styles, mortuary scenography, funeral architecture, mortuary   scenography, forms of sociability in cemeteries.</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><b>RESUMO</b></p>     <p>O que mobiliza o foco de an&aacute;lise deste trabalho &eacute; o tratamento social   dispensado ao morto e suas formas de enterramento, no final do s&eacute;culo XIX e nos   primeiros dec&ecirc;nios do XX. De que maneira se pode ler e entender atitudes e   significados sociais de uma determinada &eacute;poca a partir de um sistema de objetos   funer&aacute;rios, de pr&aacute;ticas e estilos mortu&aacute;rios? Quando submetidos &agrave; leitura, os   dispositivos e estilos funer&aacute;rios, plasmados nos t&uacute;mulos, permitem traduzir n&atilde;o   s&oacute; acomoda&ccedil;&otilde;es e equil&iacute;brios, mas tamb&eacute;m tens&otilde;es e mudan&ccedil;as significativas nas   rela&ccedil;&otilde;es afetivas que os vivos estabelecem com os seus mortos.</p>     <p><b>Palavras-chave:</b> arquitetura funer&aacute;ria, cenografias mortu&aacute;rias,   estilos mortu&aacute;rios, formas de sociabilidade nos cemit&eacute;rios.</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align=right>"<i>... if you see a Constantinople   complicated with baroque, gothic and operatic scenes. It's the cemetery</i>."</p>     <p align=right>Jo&atilde;o Cabral de Melo Neto</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>At the end of the eighteenth century when living familiarity with   the dead no longer existed, when the dead were driven out of the cities and   churches, and off to the cemeteries, graves began to share a function formerly   occupied by the church. As is known, inside these "temples", on a composted   humus and cadaverous floor in the custody of a divine ceiling, laden painted   clouds and suspended archangels, were shared collective moments of intense   sociability, not only through beliefs and common devotions, but also through   the rituals that were celebrated: baptisms, weddings, anniversaries of both   life and death, confessions, communions, religious processions and funerals etc.. </p>     <p>In the cemeteries, far from their homes, churches, and parishes,   under the open sky, the dead find shelter in their graves. Grave scenarios of   churches and chapels (on a smaller scale) were common, while others resembled   the homes of their owners. It was not just to ensure the dead a place in   heaven, but also ensure a place on earth, under the protection and the care of   the family, to protect from the elements, and conserve the body image. In   graves the corpses remain besides one another, so that each party retains its   individuality, yet the common genealogical memory is always invoked, because   the tomb is also a family dwelling.</p>     <p>In the nineteenth century, as modernized societies guided by the   principle of streamlining production, the belief in death, previously   identified as a sign of change in passing to another life, tended in many cases   to be replaced by a feeling of "subjective immortality," and with it the grave   and the cemetery were understood by many to be the place where a man should   communicate complete proof of his mortal status, but without completely   abdicating immortality.</p>     <p> Of course this relative de-Christianization, marked by strong secular   convictions, was compensated by the cult of memory and remembrance. From   Diderot to Comte a new belief would arise: the perpetuation of the dead in the   memory of the living. According to the positivist catechism, while considering   human existence as temporary, and death as a concrete and indisputable fact,   nothing prevents that the individual be revered and worshiped in memory, be it   in the most intimate recollection, an idea that could be summarized in the   formula of positivist social morality: "Vivre pour autrui tuning of   survivre et dans autrui pair.<sup><a name="nb1"></a><a href="#n1">1</a></sup>"</p>     <p> For some, the cult of the dead had transformed into ancestor worship, giving a   memorial sense of celebration and tribute while highlighting aspects of social,   civic and patriotic life more than the intimate or religious<sup><a name="nb2"></a><a href="#n2">2</a></sup>. From   this perspective, "subjective immortality" can be understood as the   "eternalizing" of ancestors, and through the collective memory strengthening   the sense of family continuity, as well as society and homeland.</p>     <p> Thus, cemeteries quickly adapted to the new civic rites (the ancestor cult)   practiced by the living in the burial place. The cemeteries adapted, relying   principally upon new investments in placing statues, busts, photographs, and   lapidary inscriptions, and a multitude of insignias over the graves    what Michel Vovelle refers to as a true "statue mania"<sup><a name="nb3"></a><a href="#n3">3</a></sup>.</p>     <p> Indeed, the process of secularization changed the way in which the dead were   cared for. This can be viewed not only through changes in ritual, but also   through the graveyard architecture, the system of funerary objects, mortuary   styles, the modes of sociability and finally,  the attitudes of the living in relation to their dead. This is the focus of our study.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Social distinction in the tombs</b></font></p>     <p> By the second half of the nineteenth century, visits to cemeteries had become   increasingly frequent, and with them the cult of the dead became family   practice, while affective and reputedly of good moral character, it became   popularized in local chronicles and other literary genres, as illustrated in an   article titled <i>The Cemeteries</i> published in December of 1837, in <i>O Panorama</i>, a Portuguese journal:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"If we had to choose a friend, before permitting the friendship, we would     look to see whether the cemetery remains of his father lay forgotten, and if     they did, so would the remains of our new "friend". The grave is the only     lasting memory that we leave to the earth, a distinguished name less indeed.<a name="nb4"></a><sup><a href="#n4">4</a></sup>"</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p> Such was the expectation of reverence and loyalty to the dead, many times   forcing the family members to forgo other forms of subjective remembrance in   favor of material evidences: namely constant visits to the cemetery, and the   special care that should be dispensed to the tombs. In literature it's not   difficult to find this anxious obligation. As expressed by Machado de Assis, in   the <i>Memorial de Aires</i>: </p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"The dead stop at the cemetery, yet there they will have the     affection of the living, with its flowers and souvenirs. (...) The point is     that there is virtually no break in the tie, and the law of life does not destroy     that which had been of life and now death.<sup><a name="nb5"></a><a href="#n5">5</a></sup>"</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p> In the same romantic intrigue, the opening scene is very suggestive and   enlightening about the pact of loyalty that exists between living and dead, and   more than that, of the complicity and continuity of family relationships after   death. The main narrator and author of the diary, one Counselor Aires exactly   one year after his arrival in Brazil having retired from diplomatic life in   Europe, in Rio de Janeiro receives a note from his sister who practically convokes   him to visit to the family tomb: she writes, "Just now I remembered that a   year ago you returned from Europe, retired. It's too late today to go to the   family vault at St. John the Baptist cemetery, and give thanks for your return,   But I will go tomorrow, and I ask that you wait for me, so we can go together...." </p>    <p>Promptly, the next morning they were there before   the family plot. What for his sister was still a cause of suffering, her   husband buried with father and mother for him, also widowed, (he could   care less about relocating the remains of his wife, buried in Vienna) in the end it was the insistence of his sister that the whole family should   gather in a single grave. For him, "the dead are fine where they   fall." But what caught his attention that morning was not the prospect of   someday seeing order restored to the family <i>post mortem</i>, nor the   tenacity and loyalty to his sister, but rather the stubbornness with which she   kept the grave, without any marks that could compromise the new look, without   any trace of the passage of time, as suggested by the narrator: an important   legacy of dignity and of social distinction.</p> </font>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"It is not ugly our tomb, it could be a little simpler, an inscription and     a cross but it is well done. It looks too new, yes. Rita maintains it     washed always, to prevent aging. Yet I believe that an old tomb gives a better     impression, you have the darkness of time, all-consuming. Being the opposite     seems to give it a vespertine halo.<sup><a name="nb6"></a><a href="#n6">6</a></sup>"</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p> With customary wit, Machado de Assis draws a fictional scenario, and a   suggestive picture of what is usually called the Second Empire of Brazil   (1840-1889), in which a transition from the old society, made up of the   estates, to the class society which is delineated in bold strokes during the   latter half of the nineteenth century.</p>     <p> Using different situations, his characters reflect this ambiguity in an   exemplary way, especially when they are garnering respect and esteem, drawn on   the acquisition of titles of nobility; the only generally recognized and   accepted form. Those who could not acquire them, or the family background with   reference to an illustrious ancestor, simply reinvented or created a   genealogical memory as a legitimating element. This was to justify their   positions as successful individuals on the social scale, having a lifestyle   compatible with the acquired status of the times, enriched with the activities   of financial capital.</p>     <p> Although money walked hand in hand with the new and much pursued social status,   everything was measured by the prestige of wealth; it was still not enough to   impose itself as the sole, exclusive value capable of promoting the individual   to the glittering world of chivalry. With a watchful eye on the web of   relationships and interests that moved in turn of the century Rio society,   Machado notes ironically that "history is good to all families," but   "(...) not all families are good to history<sup><a name="nb7"></a><a href="#n7">7</a></sup>". Certainly   this was one of the reasons for narrator/character of Memorial de Aires to   always find fault with the new appearance of the family plot, attributing it to   the excessive zeal of his sister who, in having it washed every month, always   created the same impression of a new construction.  For him, "the old   grave gives a better impression of its function if it shows the blackness of   the time...<a name="nb8"></a><a href="#n9"><sup>8</sup></a>".</p>     <p> The dilemma of the "blackness of time" was probably experienced by   many of the tombs owners, and as such, the aspiration for a genealogical   inscription to the public recognition of social status. Depending on the case,   often, little was made of their true social origins when creating in the   funerary inscription a new personal narrative, which would be as far as   possible, familiar.</p>     <p> On the whole, the names collected on the tombstones repeatedly appealed to the   simple family tree, both to invigorate the blood relations, and to recall the   social prestige of the given family. However, one should not forget that   genealogical memory has its own convenience, and may also reveal itself in other   ways, through lapses, forgetfulness, even restrictions, and selectivity. After   all, we tend to forget, except for that which is interesting, and therefore,   with ancestors, we find the lure of choosing one with whom we want to identify,   and now and again, that choice is determined by the prestige of the name.</p>     <p> The place of ancestors in the genealogical chain, for obvious reasons, has   always played an important role among the French aristocracy, whiles for some   bourgeois segments the exercise of pedigree in many cases was of no interest or   use. Still as already noted by French historian Andr&eacute; Burgui&egrave;re (1991), some of   the bourgeois families of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries sought to   repair, or in a sense, reinvent their genealogical roots, manipulating their   origins according to their purposes and needs in order to create new identities   to match a newly acquired socioeconomic status. To do so, highlighting the   supposed signs of nobility was chosen over the view of money gained by the   effort of work - since the latter had become a prerogative for the bourgeoisie   of the time.</p>     <p> Depending on the circumstances, the living relatives often sought to see in the   tombs a membership inscribed in a chain of generations, carriers of the same   family name. Thus, they tended to consider the patronymic as a symbolic asset   that actually unites the living and the dead to the same group, ensuring the   continuity all.</p>     <p> Thus, the taste for the family tomb came to be an important reference for   Brazilian urban elites, who quickly adapted to the new pattern of cemetery   space use and ownership, as well as the new burial logic. With the passage of   time, the first secularized Brazilian burial cemeteries began to compete among   themselves for the grandeur and luxury that was being displayed in the   construction of their tombs and graves. Each tried to attract to itself the   most fortunate layers of the connected and patronymic grand families who   enjoyed the economic and political prerogative of trade, the slave production,   landownership, and key positions in power. Years later, it would be the turn of   the new fortunes, coming from speculative financial capital, industry, the   professions, as well as other sectors of the urban strata that appeared in the   major capitals of the country.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> In some European cities, for instance Lisbon, it were even journals published   about cemeteries and their tombs, as was the case of the  <i>Revista dos     Monumentos Sepulcrais</i> (Journal of the Sepulchral Monuments) in 1868, whose   editorial project joined cemetery chronicles, family genealogies, death   announcements, transfers, mass invitations, thanksgivings, epitaph   transcriptions, poems about death, marble trade news, photographic studios,   grave sales and transfers, burial statistics etc. In addition, an iconic/graphic   part of the magazine was devoted to grave patterns, which included the names of   the respective owners, along with a description and artistic origin of the   funeral pieces.</p>     <p>Within the memorial evocation of ancestors were included the   collection rituals, and tears inside the tomb, and in its chapel, as well as   the renewed deposition of flowers, testimony of both love and loyalty to the   dead person. As noted by the main narrator of <i>Memorial de Ayres</i>, when   placing his eyes on the old tomb of a friend while visiting St. John the   Baptist:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"Tomb serious and beautiful, well maintained, with vases of     fresh flowers, not planted there, but cut and brought that same morning. The     circumstance made me believe that the flowers were from Fidelia herself, and a     gravedigger responding to my question answered: "They're from a lady who     brings them here from time to time...<sup><a name="nb9"></a><a href="#n9">9</a></sup>".</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Mortuary scenes</b></font></p>     <p>By this time, the assimilation of the foreign taste for tomb   artifacts was felt strongly in the first Brazilian cemeteries, even if the   aesthetic models adopted no longer corresponded to the canons of funerary art   in vogue in Europe.    <br>   In addition to the eschatological and macabre repertoire, <i>memento mori</i> on the tombs, the sacred and the religious were still a dominant presence in the   scenery of the Brazilian graveyard, not yet innovating. This presence was only   surpassed in the early twentieth century, when tomb morphology began to acquire   the secularized allegorical dimension that included special emphasis on female   figures. Interestingly, in the tropical (and late) version of the <i>belle   &eacute;poque</i>  the angels, faithful tomb guardians, came to be represented in more   human forms, the volume increasing under the pretext of enhancing the curves of   the female body.</p>     <p>Angels and archangels, mediators between heaven and earth, occupied   a privileged position in tomb decoration; their faces altering to communicate   sadness or joy:  sometimes in proclamation, or taken by ecstasy, the exultant   soul, or full of hope, the liberated soul, the beaten down with desolation, and   other moments of the romantic soul. These expressions were often enhanced by   their wings; open or at rest, closed, or inclined by flight, half-open or about   to take off.</p>     <p>  There are many female figures but transmuted into angels, and without losing   their implicitly suggested or clearly highlighted sensuality. The metamorphosis   of the angel into the figure of the woman was another feature of the funerary   art of this period. One of the more conventional forms representing this genre   is the woman who mourns the missing spouse. We find women prone, or kneeling,   fainting, or in a state of melancholy where dramatic aspects are highlighted:   contorted hands, slightly swaying in the air, bare feet, disheveled hair   sometimes strewn over the grave, the languid  or sometimes corpulent body,   sometimes with noticeably large breasts, sometimes quickly delineated .    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   Another variation on the same theme is the nostalgic, also represented by   female figures. </p>     <p>With contemplative faces, they usually oscillate between the deep   grieving hopelessness of those who do not believe in the return of that which   is gone, and the serenity of one who invests in death with convictions awaiting   hope, and passage. In these allegorical genres female figures can occupy many and   varied positions, depending on the feeling that wished to communicate about the   person's dead. Sometimes they appear to be kneeling on the graves, yet   gathering together the meaning of the deceased's life, and then writing it down   on the tombstone, or they lean on a parted or ruined column, and sometimes they appear embracing a cross. </p>     <p>A similar version, known as desolation, is usually represented by   more introspective female figures, in a state of meditation, head slightly   tilted down, implying the act of walking the path. In other situations,   crouching, resting her arms on the urn of the deceased to whom her affliction is devoted.</p>     <p>  As opposed to a melancholic atmosphere, the allegory of hope can be seen when   female figures, some of them metamorphosed into angels, are cast holding up an   anchor, a symbol of Christian hope. The Resurrection is also represented by the   female figure, usually in the form of an angel with a star on her forehead and   her right hand extended toward infinity, a symbol of eternal life, while the   other hand extended downwards and indicative of earthly life holds a simple   wreath, an ancient scroll or trumpet, instrument with the meaning of calling   the dead to resurrection and to the day of final judgment.</p>     <p>  Both the funeral decor and the marble statuary usually came from specialized   marble houses, and in particular the free stone workshops, which in the late   nineteenth century expanded and conquered a profitable market in major   Brazilian cities. As a rule, the more reputable shops concentrated in Rio de Janeiro, and especially in S&atilde;o Paulo due to the presence of a strong Italian   immigration flow. The pieces were chosen by catalog, especially when it came to   angels, religiously iconographic female figures, or decorations (wreaths,   pyres, amphorae, cornucopias, hourglasses, low relief coats of arms, plates in   high and low relief with mythic themes, arabesques, crosses, columns, obelisks,   etc.). Many of them were copies or reinterpretations of models already   established in Staglieno, in the Milan Monument, or in P&egrave;re-Lachaise, in   central Vienna, or others.    <br>   Due to the frequency with which certain themes recur, although differing in the   quality of the work, most of the funerary artifacts were made in series, unless   it was a piece signed by a master sculptor, or which became more frequent   during the early twentieth century, a renowned sculptor.</p>     <p>  The decorative elements were the most often to be commercially produced in   scale. This was probably due to their versatility in highlighting the tomb architecture.   Thus, embossed plates were mounted onto the surfaces of the tombs, in the   obelisks, on the title plates of the funeral home chapels, or as coating to the   main facade. Small and large urns, or alternating combinations of decorative   details and fittings were prominently placed on the staggered bases of the   tombs or on the tops of columns.</p>     <p>  However, not all came down to choosing from the catalogs. Many statues and   busts to decorate the graves came by order, and some were even sought out   personally in Europe. The use of the tomb decoration, as well as sculpture,   constituted a significant mark of different tastes dividing the fortunate from   the average. Wealthier families sought more individualized graves. When not   importing the funerary chapel by ship, to be assembled on site, these families   often ordered their statues, not from local workshops, but from recognized   sculptors of the time, be they domestic or foreign.    <br>   In the early twentieth century, this preference appeared with much greater   frequency in the cemeteries of Rio and Sao Paulo. Many pieces were being   sculpted in bronze, while interest in marble stone work was slowly being   replaced by granite. Bronze dominated as a decorative element in the work of   sculptors of Italian origin who settled in Sao Paulo in the first half of the   twentieth century. This of course was true for the cemeteries of Sao Paulo, especially in the second phase of "the Consolation", in Ara&ccedil;&aacute;, and later in the   St. Paul Cemetery, built in Pinheiros during the 1930s, and accommodating the   emerging business elite of the 40s, 50s, and 60s. Among the most valued and who   eventually formed a school are: Eugenio Prati, Nicola Rollo, master of Alfredo   Oliani, who himself authored important funerary sculptures, there was Amadeo   Zani (disciple of Rudolf Bernadelli), Elio de Giusto, Enrico Bianchi, Galileo   Emendabili, G. Starace, and Ottoni Zorlini. Most of them produced pieces   inspired by various motives, either by the charge of their own imaginations, or   to order for representations of grave owners or their family members.</p>     <p>  Fortunate families, especially of immigrant origins preferred to import lavish   mausoleums, as did the Matarazzo family for (Count Francisco Matarazzo   1854-1937), in the "Cemit&eacute;rio da Consola&ccedil;&atilde;o",  this sculpted by the Italian   sculptor Luigi Brizzolara, and it was followed by many others. Sensibilities   more attuned to the aesthetic avant-garde trends of the time preferred to   quietly innovate in the use of funerary art, such is the case for the well   known tomb of Olivia Guedes Penteado (1872-1934), where the group of on site   sculptures is signed by Victor Brecheret. These avant-garde trends appear more   and more frequently, and more purely, up until the end of the first half of the   twentieth century.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Picnics, Sunday tours and civic pilgrimage to the cemeteries</b></font></p>     <p>  The picture of urbanity that is outlined in the cemeteries, strictly following   the schedule of living, and evidencing itself with greater intensity on   birthdays, death anniversaries, and the day of the dead, reflected the new   values and <i>modus vivendi</i> of Rio's society of the time.</p>     <p>  As Rio de Janeiro at the time was the country's capital and therefore the   pivotal center of power and political decisions, it was privileged to host the   largest number of cemeteries, especially because the other cities were but   provincial towns, including Sao Paulo, who by 1900 had only 239,820   inhabitants. This does not mean however, that in other cities the cemeteries   were not also prioritized to reflect the important health policies that were   adopted and widely disseminated in the second half of the nineteenth century,   as such, they were part of the modernization and transformation of the urban   fabric.</p>     <p>  But the effervescent sociability in the cemeteries, also occurred in other   urban centers in the country, which were regarded by many as civic spaces, and   inspired writers of different sensitivities. Arthur Azevedo, in 1877 published   the <i>The Day of the Dead</i>, a satirical play that narrates a cemetery   visit, probably at Catumbi, being full of unusual scenes, and described in an   ironic and irreverent tone. In one scene, the visitors take the opportunity to   make the picnic fun with lots of food and alcohol, and without discarding the   flirtations, laughter and noise. In another scene, the narrative focus turns to   the fake and imitating character, (trying to copy the French) found in the   cemeteries of the Rio:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"I look at the mausoleums and I imagine myself in France!", "Yet a     Brazilian sleeps in that grave.", A young man that prefers the language of     Rousseau, on yet another crown exclaims, "A mon bon p&egrave;re.", And when the sign     is in Portuguese, yet sculpted by the hand of a foreigner, so poor is the     spelling of such simple words, that one must either laugh or simply smile." <a name="nb10"></a><sup><a href="#n10">10</a></sup></font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>  Olavo Bilac, poet and chronicler of life in Rio shared these perceptions. In   his daily notes and through a female character, he vehemently underlines the   atmosphere of intense worldliness, and very little piety during the day   consecrated to the dead in cemeteries Rio de Janeiro:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"Today is the day of the dead .... And of course, you will go to the     cemetery, whichever or any ... (...) You will go to the cemetery, my love,     because of the living, you will join to the funeral procession as if it were     your last picnic, to see and to show these people your big blue eyes,     equally beautiful between the lights of Lyric, between the windows of the     street Ouvidor and the willows  of S. Jo&atilde;o Batista or of Caju. But do not wear     clear silks between the mausoleums loaded with flowers and lighted candles,     dressed in black you must go, because framed by the blackness of mourning, your     white skin will look even whiter ... (...) It is fashion now to remember the     dead today ... (...) I, for one, have no need to go to the cemetery to remind     me of my dead. I have them here, close to me, lying all in my heart, like a     lonely grave. Alone, while outside the people go to S. Jo&atilde;o, Caju, or Carmo, to     visit those who are no longer here, I will look into the heart of where you     walked by, killing hopes ... (...) Go, my love! There will be so many people     are in the cemeteries! ... so many living eyes will see you, pale and smiling,     within the frame of black clothing!... (....) go visit the dead as a gift to   the living!"<sup><a name="nb11"></a><a href="#n11">11</a></sup>.</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>  On some occasions, writers insisted on describing such behaviors with irony and   skepticism, which in a sense already reflected the secular climate surrounding   death, visits to cemeteries, funerals, and the day of the dead. They are   portrayed more as a result of personal interests and fancies, than as an   unequivocal demonstration of faith and feeling. Machado de Assis, narrates a   situation in which one of his characters, when returning from the funeral of an   old friend, in 1864, commented, being impressed with the economic positions of   those that held the coffin, exclaiming with great enthusiasm: "they have   in their hands a coffin worth at least three thousand!"<sup><a name="nb12"></a><a href="#n12">12</a></sup></p>     <p>  It should be noted that at the end of the second half of the nineteenth century   with the growing process of secularization, the funeral ceremony was   increasingly entrusted to families, yet nothing, if they were fervent   Catholics, blocked the ecclesiastical presence,. As noted by Michel Vovelle,   the pious clauses, (device in which Catholics witnessed their faith, with teaching   about the steps to be taken after death, and signed into written wills), gave   way to material interests, and bequests to the family of the deceased, they   were executed by notaries, and reduced spending on the apparatus of the funeral   ritual. But, depending on the position and prestige of the family, the funeral   could become a civil or religious ceremony concluded with opulence, yet driven   by other codes of etiquette not necessarily religious. In these cases, the   decision to have a funeral that represented the greatness of the dead depended   solely on family, that is, the interests and desires of the children, wife or   husband, since the desire of the deceased was no longer the mandatory   testamentary guide.</p>     <p>  As in the city of the living, revealed in the renewal of urban fabric, the   widening of streets, the of building parks, monuments, public buildings and   stately mansions, private cemeteries also became privileged scenarios, which   must unfold the great spectacle of the final destination.</p>     <p>  But in addition to being burial and memorial settings, the cemeteries were also   places of power and prestige in which the living often displayed luxurious   villas, built especially for their missing relatives. As noted by Arthur   Azevedo; "Instead of a cemetery, a family portrait"<sup><a name="nb13"></a><a href="#n13">13</a></sup>. Soon   the new mortuary equipment's became an attraction for visits, especially by the   lower classes who on Sundays and public holidays devoted part of their free   time to travel the streets and alleys to see the novelties displayed at the   tombs.</p>     <p>  However, it was on the days of the dead, that the cemeteries and other local   outskirts of the country received the higher turnout. Some major newspapers of   Rio de Janeiro in the early twentieth century were occupied on a regular basis,   on this day and the next with describing the huge buzz being established,   emphasizing tombs of illustrious owners, highlighting the decoration,   appreciation and care of relatives and friends for their missing. In addition,   they highlighted the taste for civic pilgrimage, which by this time began to   impose itself as a standard practice in the cemeteries, especially on civic   dates. As an example there is the 1st of May, and other commemorations, like   the festival of the dead, which rendered homage, and restored political life to   corpses.</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"It was at S. Francisco Xavier cemetery of Caj&uacute;, as it is best known, that     gas factory workers, (paying homage to the engineer Cornelius W. Suetienbrand     by organizing a civic procession which parted from the foot of Republic square     and preceded by the Music Band of the 10th Infantry Battalion of the Army),     arrived at 10 o'clock in the morning. In the litter they could see the flags of     Brazil, France, and Holland. Four workers took a very rich crown with a     portrait of the late engineer and placed it in his tomb No. 107 in the Protestant's block, and where already had been placed another <i>biscuit</i> wreath. On     behalf of the Workers Commission spoke Mr. Francis Serpa, his speech being     matched by The Consul from Holland, a certain Mr. Gregory Barroso Mendes in a     salute on behalf of the Gas Company employees<a name="nb14"></a><sup><a href="#n14">14</a></sup>".</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>  Also in the first decade of the twentieth century, Jo&atilde;o do Rio, in his way,   also confirmed the new trend of the cemetery as a place for sociability and   relaxation: as the mirror through which the living recognized themselves in the   dead, reflected in "the large and printed book of epitaphs".   Referring to the tomb inscriptions, the chronicler added: "Ah! How they   speak well as to what are the living<a name="nb15"></a><sup><a href="#n15">15</a></sup>, see how they reveal their   vanities, for in the very marble of their missing they record their own desires   and fantasies, beliefs, opinions, judgments, complaints, jokes, spiritualist   legends, whether Catholic, positivist, etc..  and often under the   pretext of affirming the "fleeting nostalgia that only in this way can   last a little longer.<a name="nb16"></a><sup><a href="#n16">16</a></sup>"</p>     <p>  Following this picture of contrasts and double reflections, lapidary   inscriptions in many cases, also translated the desire of the living to ensure   their permanent place on earth, in a prominent position, or, indeed, to assert   their own presence as a person, even after death, to be read and remembered by   someone:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"...Seeing epitaphs, I feel a great cold and great fear when I walk among     the unnamed, forgotten, anonymous tombs, for us just a number, an appeal from     the fetter of oblivion to the pleasure of continued assertion by at least one     epitaph the passage through life...<sup><a name="nb17"></a><a href="#n17">17</a></sup>".</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>The dead in the mirror of the living</b></font></p>     <p>Aligned with the new standards of moral conduct and the accelerated pace of   city transformation, the funeral rites, (including the wakes, funerals and   processions, depending on each case), came to represent not only a crucial part   of the ritualistic sequence for the development of mourning, but also to   constitute an important indicator for definition of the degree of the dead's   prestige and, by extension, the social, political and economic conditions of his relatives.</p>     <p>  When it came to big names linked to the country's public life or political and   recognized humanitarian activities, the preparations for the wake and funeral   were given, sometimes double care. The concern with the details of the corpse's   appearance and the decoration of the event cannot go unnoticed. Costumes played   an important role in the funeral home drama at this time, becoming essential   social inscriptions and codes of etiquette. For Catholics, the Mass celebrated   on the seventh day after the death and repeated in subsequent months also   became a social competition, at which times they strengthened the condolences,   taking family members as to distribute gifts of remembrance of the deceased, in   the form of "little saints".</p>     <p>  The rules of mourning were not necessarily measured by affection for the   deceased, but by the degree of kinship by which it was connected<sup>40</sup>.   Therefore, the heavier, longer grieving, was reserved for widows, lasting two   years, the first year being very strict, with mandatory use of black, and the   second year, a little less strict. According to the closeness or distance of   the bonds, the elaboration of mourning required longer, medium, or shorter   periods of time, to be regulated by the certain codes of etiquette funeral,   usually published in manuals of civility. The use of black, suit, tie and hat   for men, and for women, headdress or veil,  jewelry being banned, but allowing   props appropriate to the occasion. As for the young, it was advised to use a   black band on the lapel or the right arm.</p>     <p>  The procession to the grave mobilized popular urban attention, in some cases   promoting the dead to "civic hero" of the nation, and when this   occurred, it establish the pedagogical fixation of collective memory, a value   that the positivists so craved<sup>42</sup>.    <br>   The prestige of the dead was evaluated not only by the grandeur of the tombs,   noble forms of nomination, by surnames passed down through generations or by   curiosities contained in the epitaphs, but it was also measured by the number   of people who gathered at the funeral religious or civil, and even more by the   degree of importance they held in society and politics.</p>     <p>  This aspect at the time, certainly would have motivated the writer from Rio, Lima Barreto, to write in an ironic way, in a story called <i>Charter of a Deceased   Rich Man</i>, that</p> </font>     <blockquote>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"my purpose was to tell you that the funeral was     beautiful. I can say this without vanity, the pleasure of its magnificence, and     its luxury, is not really mine, but yours, and it is not bad that the living     has a bit of vanity, even if he is a president of some sort, or an immortal of     the Academy of Letters. Burial funerals and other ceremonies are of no interest     to the deceased, they are made by the living and for the living.<a name="nb18"></a><sup><a href="#n18">18</a></sup>"</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>  Interestingly, the posthumous desire of this writer seemed to contradict some   of the principles touted by himself in life, especially since he was a staunch   critic of the bourgeoisie of Rio in his time, one of the first to notice the   process of urban social stratification and the expulsion of the poor from the   city center to the suburbs and hills, the "<i>favelas</i>", under the aegis of   the great urban reform undertaken by Pereira Passos, with strong Haussmannian   inspiration.</p>     <p>  After all, Lima Barreto preferred Saint John the Baptist to the Inha&uacute;ma   cemetery of the poor, the suburb where he lived and died by seeing it as   unappealing, as "lacking the air of remembrances and resigned sadness, of   that elusive poetry of the beyond" that he readily identified in   St. John the Baptist. </p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"I think it ugly, without compunction, the warm air of a     government office, but if the cemetery seems such, I do not care, the burials     that are to be, all of them, sharpen my attention when I see them pass, poor or     not, on foot, or in a car coach. Yet, the majority of the poor inhabitants of     the suburbs still maintain the rural custom of carrying their loved ones, arms   loaded on foot<a name="nb19"></a><sup><a href="#n19">19</a></sup>".</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>  St. John the Baptist was located in a neighborhood of the very rich people he   had so criticized, but ironically, it was there where he chose to be buried. It   is true that he would die early, even for those times at 43, after a lifetime   of failures and frequent hospital admissions for detoxification. As described   by Eneas Ferraz, on the first of November 1922, during his funeral were present   only a few friends, people of the neighborhood, who prayed in front of the poor   coffin in the narrow room of the house. The next day, the thin passage up to   the train station that would lead to central and soon after, to his final   destination, the lovely John the Baptist:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"In the afternoon, the funeral came, slowly driven by the hands of the few     friends who were there. But along the suburban streets, from within the modest     gardens, in the corners, and bars, appeared at every moment, all the anonymous     that would incorporate behind the coffin, silently. Blacks in shirtsleeves,     schoolboys, a band of neighborhood kids (many were prot&eacute;g&eacute;s of the writer), the     neighborhood merchants, shippers in clogs, road workers, bartenders and even     drunks, their faces bathed in tears, screaming, (with the sentimentality of     frightened children), the name of their vice companion, and also of so many     silent hours at the tables of the taverns (...) the coffin placed in a 3rd     class hearse, two or three bunches of flowers in the corners , and the car     left, followed by their small procession, on route to S. John the Baptist,     where Lima Barreto wanted his grave, his vanity. He had never lived in the     aristocratic neighborhoods, never had been received into its halls, but wanted     to sleep his immortal sleep in the cemetery of marble, so beautiful, among the     sad lords of the high cypresses. And there just next to the mountainside, he     lies.<sup><a name="nb20"></a><a href="#n20">20</a></sup>"</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>Depending on the importance of the dead person, the funeral and   burial became attractive of great public interest. But what is not seen in the   death of Lima Barreto, happened some years before with his counterpart, Machado   de Assis. In fact, he had come to know glory while still alive and when at dawn   on September 29, 1908 he died in his comfortable residence in the Cosme Velho ,   he was already considered a national institution. His body was moved to the   headquarters of the Brazilian Academy of Letters, which he founded, where public   figures flocked to immediately. The funeral spectacle, commissioned by the   Baron of Rio Branco, followed in procession through the main and crowded   downtown streets, packed with people, although many did not know nor understand   exactly what was going on. He was buried with pomp in an individual grave in   St. John the Baptist, in the presence of prominent names from the government,   politicians, scientific and trade associations, students, and other important   segments of the population, including Rui Barbosa, who was entrusted with the eulogy .</p>     <p>Machado de Assis and Lima Barreto probably never met in life. Except   for Cosme Velho the neighborhood where he lived and died, Machado de Assis only   attended the main streets of downtown Rio, including in his daily route, the Academy, the Garnier, the ministries, and on special days, the Opera House.   Lima Barreto, saw only the poor suburb where he lived, and of course the   taverns of ill repute that he frequented. After death, they finally met for the   first time in the noble neighborhood of S&atilde;o Jo&atilde;o Batista, although remaining   separate as in life. While one had purchased a well located grave in the   central, aristocratic area of the cemetery where everyone could see and revere,   the other was buried in the most secluded and elevated the slopes, in the company of the modest, today close to a <i>favela</i>.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>But the continuity of the city, according to positivism, was made   through the reproduction of family memories, bowing to the heroes and   "great men" in a continuous chain of generations whose inevitable   fate would be grave. It was there that individuals should be recognized because   it was the dead that inscribed them in the lineages of time. Such a claim did   not go unnoticed by readers on Memorial Day, as evidenced by a remark published in 1903 in the <i>Gazeta de Not&iacute;cias</i>:</p> </font>     <blockquote>       <p><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">"Each time, say the positivists,     the living are more governed by the dead. Every day, indeed, our debt to the     past is heavier. Each time, the men who appear are linked to a larger number of     generations and all the agencies re-sense the experiences of the past, created     through the countless centuries...<sup><a name="nb21"></a><a href="#n21">21</a></sup>".</font></p> </blockquote> <font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">     <p>That is why segments of urban elites sought in the past to   legitimize the present, creating bonds that allowed reconstruction, a reuniting   and at the same time, perpetuation of the memory of their ancestors<sup>49</sup>.   And it is no coincidence that in those times the family tombs in the form of   houses or chapels, cemeteries had already conquered the Brazilian cemeteries,   often forcing the individual to abdicate their own romantic expression of   individuality, to integrate with the family group, under the pretension of   solidarity and cohesion, anchoring in the patronymic recorded prominently on   front of the tomb; it was no longer the soul that was indestructible, but rather the family, and the surname.</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><b>Bibliography</b></font></p>     <!-- ref --><p>ABREU,   M. de A.&nbsp;<i>A evolu&ccedil;&atilde;o urbana do     Rio de Janeiro</i>. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar, 1987.    </p>     <!-- ref --><p>ASSIS,   M. de.&nbsp;<i>Obra completa</i>. Rio   de Janeiro: Jos&eacute; Aguilar, 1959. 3 v.    </p>     <!-- ref --><p>AZEVEDO,   A.&nbsp;<i>O Dia de Finados</i>:   s&aacute;tira. 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<body><![CDATA[<br> <a name="n14"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb14">14</a> See Gazeta de Not&iacute;cias, 03, 11, 1908</font>.    <br> <a name="n15"></a><a href="#nb15"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif">15</font></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"> <b>Rio</b>, J. do. &ldquo;Epit&aacute;fios&rdquo;, In <i>Gazeta de Not&iacute;cia</i>, 03, 11, 1908.</font>    <br> <a name="n16"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb16">16</a> <i>Gazeta de Not&iacute;cias</i>, 03, 11, 1908.</font>    <br> <a name="n17"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb17">17</a> Idem, ibidem.</font>    <br> <a name="n18"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb18">18</a> See Barreto, L. <i>Vida e morte de M. J. Gonzaga de S&aacute;</i>. Rio de Janeiro, Editora Brasiliense, 1956, p. 287.</font>    <br> <a name="n19"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb19">19</a> See Barreto, L. <i>Feiras e Mafu&aacute;s</i>. S&atilde;o Paulo, Ed. Brasiliense, 1956, p. 287-292.</font>    <br> <a name="n20"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb20">20</a> See Ferraz, E. &ldquo;A morte do mestre&rdquo;, in <i>O Pa&iacute;s</i>, Rio de Janeiro, 20.11.1922, p. 4.</font>    <br> <a name="n21"></a><font size="2" face="Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif"><a href="#nb21">21</a> <i>Gazeta de Not&iacute;cias</i>, Rio de Janeiro, 02,11,1903</font>.</p> </font>      ]]></body><back>
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