Álvaro Lins Explained

Álvaro de Barros Lins
Birth Date:December 14, 1912
Nationality:Brazilian
Occupation:Lawyer, Journalist, Professor, Literary critic
Spouse:Heloísa Ramos Lins
Children:2
Parents:Pedro Alexandrino Lins (father)

Álvaro de Barros Lins GCCGCL (December 14, 1912 – June 4, 1970) was a Brazilian lawyer, journalist, professor and literary critic.

Family

Married to Heloísa Ramos Lins, with whom he had two children.

Career

Journalism

The son of Pedro Alexandrino Lins and Francisca de Barros Lins, Álvaro Lins took the primary course in his hometown, moving to attend high school at Salesian College and Padre Félix Gymnasium, both in Recife. There he entered the Faculty of Law of the University of Recife in 1931, bachelor's degree in 1935. At the age of 20, as a representative of the Student Directory, he produced his first cultural work, called The university as a School of Public Men. From 1932 to 1940, he was also a professor of general geography and history of civilization in several schools in the city.

In October 1934, invited by the then intervenor and later governor of Pernambuco, Carlos de Lima Cavalcanti, assumed the position of Secretary of the State Government. He was part, in 1936, of the plate of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) of Pernambuco, to run for a seat in the House of Representatives. However, the coup that established the Estado Novo interrupted the elections and Álvaro Lins left the Secretariat of state in November 1937 and forgot his political plans.

From there, he became a journalism writer, performing it in the Diário da Manhã of Pernambuco, from 1937 to 1940, where he was editor and director. Moving to Rio de Janeiro, he began to make literary criticism, a genre that gave him national fame. There, he was a journalist for diário de notícias, Diários Associados, between 1939 and 1940, and editor-in-chief of Correio da Manhã, from 1940 to 1956. In 1952 he left for Portugal to teach the discipline Brazilian Studies at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the University of Lisbon. There is also collaboration of his authorship in the Luso-Brazilian magazine Atlântico.[1]

Returning to Brazil in August 1954, because of the crisis triggered by the suicide of Getúlio Vargas, he resumed journalism and the chair of Brazilian Literature at Colégio Pedro II.

Literary work at the Academia Brasileira de Letras

On April 5, 1955, at the age of 42, he was unanimously elected to become the fourth occupant of chair 17 of the Brazilian Academy of Letters, vacant after the death of Edgar Roquette-Pinto, being received by the academic João Neves da Fontoura on July 7, 1956.

Other jobs

Álvaro Lins was Brazilian ambassador to Portugal from November 1956 to October 1959. He was the president of the 1st Inter-American Conference of Amnesty for Exiles and Political Prisoners of Spain and Portugal, based at the São Paulo Law School in 1960, and director of the Literary Supplement of the Daily News between March 1961 and June 1964. In 1962, he headed the Brazilian delegation to the World Peace Congress, held in Moscow. Retiring from the newspaper in 1964, Álvaro Lins devoted his last years to writing books. On 30 December 1957 he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Military Order of Christ of Portugal and on 28 December 1994 he was awarded a posthumous title with the Grand Cross of the Order of Liberty of Portugal.[2]

Books

In Portuguese.

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ATLÂNTICO : REVISTA LUSO-BRASILEIRA . 2022-06-30.
  2. Web site: ENTIDADES ESTRANGEIRAS AGRACIADAS COM ORDENS PORTUGUESAS - Página Oficial das Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas . 2022-06-30 . www.ordens.presidencia.pt.