Rodrigo Lopes De Barros
Head of Portuguese Section
Assistant Professor of Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin American Studies
- Education
- B.A. Federal University of Santa Catarina
M.A. Federal University of Santa Catarina
Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin - Office
- 718 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 201A
- rlbarros@bu.edu
- Phone
- 617-353-6244
Rodrigo Lopes de Barros is a scholar, filmmaker, and writer. He has a BA in Law and an MA in Literary Theory from the Federal University of Santa Catarina, the latter with a fellowship from CNPQ (the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development). He received a Ph.D. in Hispanic Literature from The University of Texas at Austin with work in the fields of Cuban and Brazilian cultures. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the University of São Paulo with a fellowship from FAPESP and was invited to visiting positions at Harvard University and the Federal University of Espírito Santo. His writing interests include the relationship between ethnography and literature, the avant-garde cinema and contemporary art in Cuba and Brazil, and the relationship between the arts and national histories.
Lopes de Barros directed the documentary Chacal: Forbidden to Write Poetry (Chacal: Proibido Fazer Poesia), for which he received the Award of Merit in Film from the Latin American Studies Association (LASA). He also directed the hybrid Literary Ménage: An Investigation into the Writing of Jacques Fux (Ménage Literário: Uma Investigação sobre a Escrita de Jacques Fux) and the fiction short film The Body (O Corpo).
Lopes de Barros’ essays on Brazilian and Cuban cultures have appeared as chapters of books and journal articles in places like Comparative Literature Studies, Alea: Estudos Neolatinos, and Outra Travessia. He co-edited the book Ruinologias: Ensaios Sobre Destroços do Presente and his short stories have been published in literary magazines. As a literary writer, he was among the winners of “Cultural Contest ‘Caderno 2’ in the 450 Years of São Paulo” by the newspaper O Estado de São Paulo. As a press editor, he co-organized the publication of contemporary intellectuals into Portuguese through Editora Cultura e Barbárie, which he co-founded.