In this
Portuguese name, the first or maternal
family name is Evaristo and the second or paternal family name is Brito.
Conceição Evaristo
Evaristo in 2013
Born
Maria da Conceição Evaristo de Brito (1946-11-29) 29 November 1946 (age 77) Belo Horizonte,
Minas Gerais, Brazil
Maria da Conceição Evaristo de Brito (born 29 November 1946) is a Brazilian writer.[1] Her work is marked by her life experiences as an
Afro-Brazilian woman, which she calls escrevivência—a portmanteau of escrita (writing) and vivência (life experience).[2] She was born into a humble family and is the second oldest of 9 siblings, being the first in her household to earn a university degree. She helped her mother and aunt with washing clothes and deliveries, while studying.[3]
In the 1970s, she moved to Rio de Janeiro, where she passed a contest, starting to write only in the 1990s.[4] She completed her master's degree in the mid-1990s and her doctorate in the early 2010s.[5][6]
Biography
Conceição was born in a
favela in the southern area of
Belo Horizonte, to a very poor family with nine brothers and her mother.[7]
She had to work as a domestic servant during her youth until she finished her
normal course in 1971, at the age of 25. She moved to Rio de Janeiro, where she was approved on a civil service exam to be a teacher and studied Letters at
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.[8] In the 1980s, Evaristo got in touch with the
Quilombhoje group. She made her debut in literature in 1990, with works published in the series Cadernos Negros, published by the organization.[9]
She earned a master's degree in Brazilian Literature from
PUC-Rio in 1996, and a PhD in Comparative Literature from
Universidade Federal Fluminense in 2011.[9] Her works, especially the novel Ponciá Vicêncio (2003), address themes such as racial, gender and class discrimination. In 2007, her first novel, Ponciá Vicêncio, became the focus of a Master's thesis in Brazil, the first one on the author.[10] The novel was translated into English and published in the United States also in 2007.[11] She currently teaches at UFMG as a visiting professor.[9]
Conceição Evaristo is a great exponent of contemporary Brazilian literature. She writes about race, gender and class discrimination, especially of black women.[14]
Works
Novels
Ponciá Vicêncio (2003)
Becos da Memória (2006)
Canção para Ninar Menino Grande (2022)
Poetry
Poemas da recordação e outros movimentos (2008)
Short stories
Insubmissas lágrimas de mulheres (Nandyala, 2011)
Olhos d'água (Pallas, 2014)
Histórias de leves enganos e parecenças (Editora Malê, 2016)
Participation in anthologies
Cadernos Negros (Quilombhoje, 1990)
Contos Afros (Quilombhoje)
Contos do mar sem fim (Editora Pallas)
Questão de Pele (Língua Geral)
Schwarze prosa (Germany, 1993)
Moving beyond boundaries: international dimension of black women's writing (1995)
Women righting – Afro-brazilian Women's Short Fiction (England, 2005)
Finally Us: contemporary black brazilian women writers (1995)
^Barbosa, Maria José Somerlate (1 November 2011). "Ponciá Vicencio". Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas. 44 (2): 325–326.
doi:
10.1080/08905762.2011.614494.
ISSN0890-5762.