abstract
From an analysis of the space of the home, a comparative study of the novels Fogo Morto, by José Lins do Rego (1943), A menina morta, by Cornélio Penna (1954), and Crônica da casa assassinada, by Lúcio Cardoso (1959), allows a glimpse into a complex framework of relations between novelistic form and Brazilian society. These are novels that take place in the interior or in the shadow of the domestic space, whose meaning points to the specificities of Brazilian society anchored in the structure and functioning of the slave-based mode of production, expressed by the significant presence of the home as casa-grande. By formulating local specificities, the house-country is transfigured into a prison, a lunatic asylum and tomb space.
keywords:
“Casa-grande”; Patriarchy; Family; Prison; Madness