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Cláudia de Campos

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Cláudia de Campos
A portrait of Cláudia de Campos in her 1894 book Último Amor.
A portrait of Cláudia de Campos in her 1894 book Último Amor.
BornMaria Cláudia de Campos
January 28, 1859
Sines, Portugal
DiedDecember 30, 1916(1916-12-30) (aged 57)
Lisbon, Portugal
OccupationWriter, activist
Notable worksElle (1899)

Maria Cláudia de Campos (January 28, 1859 – December 30, 1916) was a Portuguese feminist and writer, best known for her 1899 novel Elle. She was on the Board of Directors of the Portuguese League for Peace [pt]'s Feminist Sector and a member of the Portuguese Committee of the Women's League for Peace and Disarmament.

Biography

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Cláudia de Campos was born in 1859 in Sines, Portugal, the daughter of Francisco António de Campos and Maria Augusta da Palma.[1][2][3] Her grandfather, Jacinto da Palma, was health chief for the Port of Sines.[2][4]

An educated woman, de Campos was fluent in French.[1][2] She specialized in English studies at Mrs. Kutle's School and wrote a manuscript about Percy Shelley, while also studying German literature.[3][4]

In 1875, at age 16, she married the 19-year-old Joaquim d'Ornelas e Matos.[1][2][3] They settled in Lisbon and had two children before legally separating in 1888, after 13 years of marriage.[1][2]

After gaining her independence, she began a career as a writer, contributing to various publications including A Leitura from 1894 to 1896 and A Sociedade do Futuro from 1902 to 1904. She sometimes wrote under the pen names Colette/Colete and Carmen Silva.[1][5]

Her first book, the short story collection Rindo, appeared in 1892.[2] She is best known for her 1899 novel Elle, which is set in her hometown of Sines.[2] The book drew controversy due to its autofictional nature, depicting real people and situations from de Campos' youth in Sines with only their names changed.[3]

De Campos also became a feminist and pacifist activist. In the first decade of the 1900s, she served on the Board of Directors of the Portuguese League for Peace [pt]'s Feminist Sector and joined the Portuguese Committee of the Women's League for Peace and Disarmament, a French organization.[1][2] Her feminist views are expressed in her 1895 essay collection Mulheres. Ensaios de psicologia feminina, which examined such figures as Charlotte Brontë, Madame de la Fayette, and Germaine de Staël.[2][3][6] She has been described as one of "the first ambassadors of Portuguese feminism."[7]

She died in Lisbon in 1916.[1][2][3] Nearly a century after the publication of her 1899 novel Elle, it was reprinted in Sines in 1997.[2]

Selected works

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Cláudia de Campos poses for a portrait with two swan sculptures
A postcard portrait of Cláudia de Campos around the 1890s.
  • Rindo: contos (1892)
  • Último amor (1894)
  • Mulheres. Ensaios de psicologia feminina (1895)
  • Elle: com o retracto da auctora (1899)
  • A baroneza Stael e o duque de Palmella (1901)
  • Elle (2nd ed., 1997)[1]
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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Cláudia de Campos". Escritoras: Women Writers in Portuguese Before 1900 (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2018-08-08.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lousada, Isabel; Patrício, Sandra (November 2016). "Cláuda de Campos: Da Literatura à Intervenção Cívica" (PDF). Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Cláudia de Campos". Sines Município (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  4. ^ a b "CLÁUDIA DE CAMPOS: MEDALHA DE MÉRITO MUNICIPAL Nº 21" (PDF). Município de Sines (in Portuguese). 1995-11-24. Retrieved 2024-07-10.
  5. ^ Puga, Rogério Miguel (2020-05-15). Chronology of Portuguese Literature: 1128-2000 (in Brazilian Portuguese). Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-5125-1.
  6. ^ Duarte, João Ferreira; Maia, Rita Bueno; Pinto, Marta Pacheco (2015-09-18). How Peripheral is the Periphery? Translating Portugal Back and Forth: Essays in Honour of João Ferreira Duarte. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-8304-7.
  7. ^ Bermudez, Silvia; Johnson, Roberta (2018-02-05). A New History of Iberian Feminisms. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4875-1029-9.

Bibliography

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  • Castro, Zília Osório de and António Ferreira e Sousa (eds.) Dicionário no Feminino (séculos XIX-XX). Lisbon, Livros Horizonte, 2005, pp. 220-221