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312 pages, 6 x 9
12 color photos, 30 b&w photos
Hardcover
Release Date:04 Nov 2025
ISBN:9781477332535
CA$55.95 add to cart button Pre-order
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Concrete Encoded

Poetry, Design, and the Cybernetic Imaginary in Brazil

University of Texas Press

A study of concrete art and poetry, its implications, and influence in Brazil.

Concrete art and poetry burst onto Brazil’s cultural stage in the 1950s, while the country was embarking on a dizzying period of modernization. Bringing together key poets and visual artists alongside less recognized figures, Nathaniel Wolfson shows that concretism was hardly socially inert, as pundits have suggested. Rather, it presciently grappled with an emerging information age that would soon reorganize human relations globally.

Concrete Encoded describes a nascent cybernetic imaginary. While concretism has long been considered Brazil’s most global aesthetic movement, Wolfson traces new circles of international theorists and practitioners involved in critical technological thought. Wolfson argues that concrete poetry is the quintessential literary genre of the early information age. He shows that Brazilian poets, artists, and designers contested the military dictatorship’s technological authoritarianism and information-gathering operations. Vigorous experimentalists, their attention to form and semantics unveiled both the creative and nefarious possibilities of algorithmic writing. A highly original and daring work, Concrete Encoded reckons with aesthetic responses from Brazil to an advancing capitalist and digital era.

Nathaniel Wolfson is associate professor in the department of Spanish and Portuguese and affiliated faculty in the Program in Critical Theory and the Berkeley Center for New Media at University of California, Berkeley.

  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction: The Aesthetics and Politics of Code
  • Chapter 1. Just Semantics: Haroldo de Campos’s Amoral Machines
  • Chapter 2. Mira Schendel’s Hermeneutics of Everyday Life
  • Chapter 3. João Cabral de Melo Neto’s Prosthetic Landscapes
  • Chapter 4. Code-Patterns: Aloisio Magalhães’s Cybernetic-Popular Design
  • Epilogue: On Life and Apophantics
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
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