The literary arsonist
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International Congress Uncertain Landscapes
Abstract
Fires in rural landscapes were imagined and represented in Portuguese
literature from the early 20th century to the present. We analysed a set
of 55 excerpts from 43 published texts produced by 29 writers. These
excerpts, which we call pyrostories, convey a literary and historical
perspective of how and why those fires occur and their impacts as socioecological
drivers. Arsonists are found in a third of these pyrostories,
which stand out in the texts where fire origin is identified. Writers included
in the literary corpus portrayed the characters of the arsonists as people
struggling with difficult living conditions and subordination. A content
analysis of the environmental and social contexts of fire ignition and the
portrayals of fires given in the pyrostories reveal the anti-idyll of rural life
in Portugal during the Estado Novo (1933-1974) and represent the use
of fires as a tool of resistance and protest, also despair, against private
interests and state forestry policies. Thus, from the writer’s vantage
point, fires are depicted as ‘friends’, ‘foes’ or both, depending on the
perspectives of different local actors. Pyrostories grant notoriety to the
arsonist, giving her/him a literary role with historical significance in the
social and environmental research into rural fires.
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Citation
Queiroz, A. I., Ágoas, F., Portela, J., Sousa, J., & Carmo, M. (2023). The literary arsonist. Abstract from Uncertain Landscapes, Guimarães, Portugal.