Published by University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque. This publication has been supported by the Newberry Library's Lester J. Cappon Fund and by the National Endowment for the Humanities.(). First Edition., 1987
Seller: Lighthouse Books, ABAA, Dade City, FL, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: UNSPECIFIED. Octavo, brown cloth (hardcover), gilt letters, xiv, 385 pp. First Edition. From dust jacket: Dialogues of the Great Things of Brazil, an inestimable contribution to Brazilian history and literature, is the first English translation of the 1618 Portuguese work Dialogos das grandezas do Brasil. As the late Frederick Holden Hall, Luso-Brazilian bibliographer for the Newberry Library and initiator of the project, once remarked: "The Dialogues are the equivalent for Brazil of the writings of Captain Smith for Virginia." Evidently written to encourage immigration, the Dialogues describe the history of the colonization of northeastern Brazil and the agricultural and mineral wealth of the new land. In addition, the author provides information about every aspect of the land and people of the region: geography, history, flora and fauna, scenery. The inhabitants are described in an account enlivened by anecdote, speculation, and personal recollection. Indeed, through the voice of Brandonio, the ardent defender of Brazil, Brandao expresses his own enthusiasm for his adopted country. Alviano, the "hertetic in things Brazilian," is offset against Brandonio to repreent those who considered the New World a worthless land. The translation is based on a seventeenth-century manuscript in the library of the University of Leyden. This manuscript is evidently a copy of a work presumably by Ambrosio Fernandes Brandao, a rich sugar planter who had immigrated to Brazil from Portugal. After Hall's death in 1972, the project was taken over by two of his colleagues -- William Harrison, a Brazilianist at Northern Illinois University, and Dorothy Winters Welker, an editor, writer, and former professor of foreign languages. They completed Hall's manuscript, added extensive annotations, and included illustrations. Scholars and beginning students alike will find the Dialogues to be fascinating reading as well as an invaluable scholarly resource. South American History, Latin America, South America, Brazil, Braziliana, Decorative Books. nslic.
Published by Univ. of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1987
Seller: 32.1 Rare Books + Ephemera, IOBA, ESA, Princeton, NJ, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
First Edition
Hardcover. 8vo. Translated from a 17th C. by Frederick Holden Hall with additional help from Wm. Harrison & Dorothy Welker. Written to encourage immigration, it describes the history of the colonization of Northeast Brazil and the agricultural and mineral wealth of the new land. Included are descriptions of the geography, history, flora and fauna, scenery. Very Good with some light soiling to the edges in a Very Good unlaminated dust jacket.