(ITA - 2024) No conto Dina, de Lus Bernardo Honwana, o capataz, ao descobrir que Maria filha de Madala, desespera-se e oferece ao ancio a tarde de folga para que ele possa conversar com a moa. Tal passagem sugere que:
(ITA - 2024) A respeito do romance O avesso da pele, de Jeferson Tenrio, assinale a alternativa CORRETA.
(ITA - 2024) Tema predominante ao longo de O avesso da pele, a tomada de conscincia sobre a negritude pode ser verificada em todos os trechos seguintes, EXCETO EM:
(ITA - 2024) Leia abaixo os excertos 1 e 2 e, em seguida, as asseres I, II e III. Por fim, assinale a alternativa CORRETA.
(ITA - 2024) Tendo em vista o romance O avesso da pele, avalie as asseres de I a IV e, em seguida, assinale a alternativa CORRETA. I. Juliana e Martha, assim como Henrique, lidam com o racismo de modo consciente e combativo, sem jamais deixar de perder a ternura. II. A tomada de conscincia em relao ao racismo um processo que acontece de maneira semelhante para Henrique e Martha, s vezes com culpa, s vezes com jbilo. III. Martha, apesar de sofrer as consequncias do racismo e do machismo, no se sente uma vtima e, por isso, no assume uma postura combativa contra isso. IV. No romance, um processo que afeta todas as personagens, mas de maneiras diferentes e nem sempre no mesmo grau, a conscientizao sobre o racismo.
(ITA - 2024) Na pea A falecida, Nelson Rodrigues mergulha na realidade social do Rio de Janeiro da dcada de 1950. Sinal disso
(ITA - 2024) A exemplo da pea A falecida, so elementos que atestam a modernidade do teatro de Nelson Rodrigues:
(ITA - 2024) A respeito de Zulmira, protagonista de A falecida, possvel afirmar que: I. seu apego ao racional e ao mundo real a faz tomar conscincia de sua situao precria e marginalidade social. II. trai seu marido, Tuninho, porque ela achava que ele a considerava suja e fria. III. seu escapismo fruto de sua insatisfao com a prpria precariedade em que vive. IV. sua obsesso pela morte e por um enterro luxuoso uma forma de negar sua realidade depauperada.
(ITA - 2024) A respeito de Tuninho, personagem de A falecida, possvel afirmar que:
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else, The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic, by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection is The City of Women, by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable: Captains of the Sands and Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands. The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story: Backlands: The Canudos Campaign, by Euclides da Cunha, and The War of the End of the World, by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] The text mainly intends to
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else,The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic,by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection isThe City of Women,by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable:Captains of the SandsandDona Flor and Her Two Husbands.The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story:Backlands: The Canudos Campaign,by Euclides da Cunha, andThe War of the End of the World,by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] According to the text, the author recommends the book The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic for the reader to
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else,The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic,by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection isThe City of Women,by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable:Captains of the SandsandDona Flor and Her Two Husbands.The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story:Backlands: The Canudos Campaign,by Euclides da Cunha, andThe War of the End of the World,by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] The two books that present same gender main characters around which the action centers are:
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else,The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic,by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection isThe City of Women,by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable:Captains of the SandsandDona Flor and Her Two Husbands.The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story:Backlands: The Canudos Campaign,by Euclides da Cunha, andThe War of the End of the World,by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] No trecho do terceiro pargrafo As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities, o termo sublinhado contm um prefixo de negao. Assinale a alternativa que apresenta o termo que NO contm prefixo de negao.
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else,The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic,by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection isThe City of Women,by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable:Captains of the SandsandDona Flor and Her Two Husbands.The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story:Backlands: The Canudos Campaign,by Euclides da Cunha, andThe War of the End of the World,by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] No trecho do terceiro pargrafo While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador o termo sublinhado pode ser substitudo, sem alterao de sentido, por:
(ITA - 2024) Leia o texto a seguir para responder s questes de 25 a 30. Read Your Way Through Salvador By Itamar Vieira Junior and translated by Johnny Lorenz. July 19, 2023. I was born in Salvador, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, and lived in the general vicinity until I reached the age of 15. But it was when I left that I really came to know my city. How was I able to discover more about my birthplace while traveling far from home? It might sound rather clichd but, I assure you, literature made this possible: It took me on a journey, long and profound, back home, enveloping me in words and imagination. To understand the formation of our unique society and, consequently, the cityscape of Salvador, one should read, before anything else,The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom and Islam in the Black Atlantic,by Joo Jos Reis, Flvio dos Santos Gomes and Marcus J.M. de Carvalho. Rufino was an aluf, or Muslim spiritual leader, born in the Oyo empire in present-day Nigeria and enslaved during his adolescence. The Story of Rufino is an epic tale, encapsulating the life of one man in search of freedom as well as the history of the development of Salvador itself, a place inextricably linked with the diaspora across the Black Atlantic. Another book for which I have deep affection isThe City of Women,by the American anthropologist Ruth Landes. It offers an intriguing perspective, focusing on matriarchal power in candombl, an Afro-Brazilian sacred practice, and revealing how the social organization of its spiritual communities reverberates across the city. If you want to feel the intensity of life on the streets of Salvador, these two books, both by Amado, are indispensable:Captains of the SandsandDona Flor and Her Two Husbands.The first is a coming-of-age story in which we follow a group of children and adolescents living on the streets and on the beaches around the Bay of All Saints. Written more than 80 years ago, the book was banned and even burned in the public square during the dictatorship of Getlio Vargas in the first half of the 20th century. As a portrait of Salvador, it is still relevant and reveals our deep inequalities. Dona Flor and her Two Husbands is one of Amados most popular novels, translated into more than 30 languages and adapted many times for theater, cinema, and television. The book is a kind of manifesto for a womans liberation. Dona Flor possesses great culinary talent, and oppressed by a patriarchal society, finds herself divided between two men, one being her deceased husband. While the novel captures the daily life of the city in the 1940s, it is also a wonderful guide to the cuisine of Salvador, with its African and Portuguese influences. I invite readers to travel into the interior of Bahia, many hours by car from Salvador to the region known as the Serto, whose name translates loosely to backwoods. Two books can also transport you there, and they are sides of the same story:Backlands: The Canudos Campaign,by Euclides da Cunha, andThe War of the End of the World,by Mario Vargas Llosa. Backlands is one of the most important works in the history of Brazilian literature. It is a journalistic telling that introduces us not only to the brutal War of Canudos, but also to the intriguing landscape of the Serto, a place so full of contradictions. In his writing of the conflict, da Cunha tells the story of the genesis of the tough sertanejo: a mythic, cowboyesque figure of the drought-stricken, lawless interior. The War of the End of the World is an essential epic that amplifies the narrative of Backlands, bringing a more 11 imaginative, creative aspect to the story of Antnio Conselheiro, the spiritual leader of a rebellion, and of the multitude that followed him to their deaths. [Fonte: Read Your Way Through Salvador. In: The New York Times, 19/07/2023, . Adaptado. Data de acesso: 01/09/2023.] According to the information about the two books presented in the fourth and fifth paragraphs,