Luís da Câmara Cascudo

Luís da Câmara Cascudo (December 30, 1898 – July 30, 1986) was a Brazilian anthropologist, folklorist, journalist, historian, lawyer, and lexicographer.

Luís da Câmara Cascudo

He was born in Natal, Northeast Brazil. He lived his entire life in Natal and dedicated himself to the study of Brazilian culture and he was a professor at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte. He was also interested in music and was a co-founder of the Natal Instituto de Música in 1933.[1] The institute of anthropology there now bears his name.

He was once nearly fired for studying folkloric figures such as the werewolf.

Books

As a researcher into the manifestations of the Brazilian cultures, he left behind an extensive body of work. Câmara Cascudo wrote 31 books on Brazilian folklore, over 8000 pages. He has done the most extensive work on Brazilian folklore so far, with notable quality, and he has received recognition for it.

  • Alma patrícia (1921 his first work),
  • Traditional Tales of Brazil (1946).
  • Dictionary of Brazilian Folklore (1952).
  • Made in Africa, pesquísas e notas, 1965, and later editions [2]
  • His studies of the period of the Dutch invasions of Brazil led to the publication of his Geography of Dutch Brazil.
  • His memoirs, Time and I (1971) were edited posthumously.
gollark: https://www.haskell.org/tutorial/monads.html explains monads slightly for someone familiar with the rest of Haskell but somehow not that.
gollark: But monads are cool*!
gollark: I refuse.
gollark: This is using a "state monad", which is basically just what Haskell does because they wanted mutable variables but different somehow.
gollark: Less ironically, it's basically a purely functional way to, well, sequence actions which operate on state, sort of thing.

References

  1. Béhague, Gerard (2001). "Cascudo, Luiz da Câmara". In Root, Deane L. (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Oxford University Press.
  2. CÂMARA CASCUDO, Luís da. Made in Africa. São Paulo: Global Editora, 2001; por Camila Lembo, an overview, retrieved May 23, 2016)


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