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Introductory Note to
the Reader Mãe was my fifth book read entirely in
Portuguese, and it came as a pleasant and somewhat unexpected confirmation
that my proficiency in this language is more solid than I had initially
assumed, perhaps aided by its proximity to Spanish, my mother tongue. Having
worked as a literature professor at one stage of my professional life, and
being, above all, an avid reader, I felt compelled to venture into new and
fertile territory for my intellectual curiosity: Brazilian literature. In Costa Rica, access to Brazilian
literary works is still limited, often reduced to a narrow and repetitive
exposure, most notably to Paulo Coelho, while the richness and diversity of
Brazil’s literary tradition remain largely unexplored. Engaging with José de
Alencar’s ars literaria has therefore allowed me to expand my Latin American
literary horizon and to revisit, from a different cultural angle, themes that
are both historically situated and ethically enduring. Reading Mãe has been an exercise
not only in linguistic growth but also in critical re-engagement with
nineteenth-century social structures, narrative strategies, and moral
dilemmas that continue to resonate today. This essay emerges from that
encounter, as both a personal milestone in my reading journey and an academic
reflection on Alencar’s dramatic exploration of motherhood, silence, and
social illusion. |
Maternal Sacrifice and Social Illusion: Plot, Character, and Symbolism in José de Alencar’s Mãe
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Abstract This
essay analyzes José de Alencar’s theatrical play Mãe (1860) through a
close examination of its plot structure, character construction, and symbolic
framework. Drawing on theories of Romantic melodrama and realist social
critique, the study explores how Alencar dramatizes maternal sacrifice within
a rigidly stratified, slaveholding society. Central attention is given to
Joana, an enslaved woman whose silenced motherhood enables her son’s social
mobility, as well as to Jorge and the secondary characters who function as
ideological agents sustaining social illusion. By situating Mãe within
nineteenth-century Brazilian literary and social contexts, the essay argues
that Alencar transforms private suffering into a collective moral indictment,
exposing the ethical contradictions underlying respectability, lineage, and
institutionalized silence. |
Keywords: José
de Alencar, Mãe, Brazilian Literature, Brazilian Romanticism, Latin American
Literature, Melodrama, Motherhood, Slavery in Brazil, Ideology, Literary
Analysis |
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Resumen Este ensayo analiza la obra teatral Mãe
(1860) de José de Alencar a partir del estudio de su estructura argumental,
la construcción de sus personajes y su dimensión simbólica. Desde una
perspectiva que combina el melodrama romántico y la crítica social realista,
se examina cómo Alencar representa el sacrificio materno en el contexto de
una sociedad esclavista y jerárquicamente estratificada. El análisis se
centra en Joana, una mujer esclavizada cuya maternidad silenciada garantiza
la movilidad social de su hijo, así como en Jorge y los personajes
secundarios que operan como agentes ideológicos del orden social. El ensayo
sostiene que Mãe convierte el sufrimiento privado en una denuncia
moral colectiva, revelando las contradicciones éticas que sostienen la
respetabilidad social, la genealogía y el silencio institucionalizado. |
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Resumo Este ensaio analisa a peça teatral Mãe
(1860), de José de Alencar, a partir de sua estrutura narrativa, da
construção das personagens e de seu valor simbólico. Com base em abordagens
do melodrama romântico e da crítica social realista, o estudo examina como
Alencar representa o sacrifício materno em uma sociedade escravocrata e
rigidamente hierarquizada. O foco recai sobre Joana, uma mulher escravizada
cuja maternidade silenciada possibilita a ascensão social do filho, bem como
sobre Jorge e as personagens secundárias que atuam como agentes ideológicos
da ordem social. Argumenta-se que Mãe transforma o sofrimento
individual em uma denúncia moral coletiva, expondo as contradições éticas que
sustentam a respeitabilidade, a linhagem e o silêncio social. |
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José
de Alencar’s theatrical play Mãe (“Mother”) occupies a distinctive
position within nineteenth-century Brazilian literature. While Alencar is
frequently associated with Indianist novels and the project of national
romanticism, Mãe reveals his engagement with social melodrama and
moral realism, particularly in relation to family, class hierarchy, and
slavery. First staged in 1860, the play dramatizes the tragic consequences of
social prejudice through the figure of Joana, an enslaved woman who suppresses
her maternal identity to preserve her son’s social status and future. Through
its plot structure, symbolic characterization, and ideological tension, Mãe
exposes the contradictions of a society of yesteryear that venerates motherhood
while denying its humanity to enslaved women. This essay (my 518th post in Reflective
Online Teaching) analyzes the plot, central and secondary characters, and
symbolic framework of Mãe, drawing on Romantic melodrama and realist
social critique to demonstrate how Alencar transforms private sacrifice into a
collective moral indictment.
Plot Structure and Moral Progression
Alencar’s
Mãe follows a melodramatic structure consistent with what Peter Brooks
(1976) terms the “moral legibility” of melodrama, in which ethical conflict is
heightened to render injustice visible. The plot centers on Jorge, a young man
striving for social respectability, and Joana, his enslaved mother, whose
maternity must remain hidden for him to circulate freely within a rigidly
stratified society. The concealment of Joana’s identity functions as the play’s
primary dramatic tension, shaping both its emotional trajectory and its ethical
stakes.
The
author delays the revelation of Joana’s maternity, allowing the audience to
experience the cost of silence before its consequences emerge. This narrative
strategy aligns with Antonio Candido’s (1975) observation that Alencar often
privileges gradual moral exposure over sudden revelation though the spectator or
the reader already knows the character’s internal drama. The climax of the play
occurs not through confrontation but through erasure: Joana chooses death
rather than disclosure, preserving her son’s social standing at the expense of
her own existence. While this resolution conforms to Romantic tragedy, it simultaneously
gestures toward realist critique. As Roberto Schwarz (2000) argues, Brazilian
literary narratives of this period frequently expose how personal virtue is
mobilized to stabilize unjust social structures.
Joana and the Symbolism of Silenced Motherhood
Joana
is the ethical and symbolic core of Mãe. Although socially marginalized,
this characters embodies the play’s highest moral value: unconditional maternal
love. Her motherhood, however, is both biologically undeniable and socially
inadmissible. This contradiction situates Joana within what Gilbert and Gubar
(1979) describe as the literary tradition of silenced women whose virtue is
expressed through self-negation rather than agency.
Symbolically,
Joana represents the enslaved mother whose humanity must remain invisible for
the social harmony of her son to persist. Alencar avoids portraying her as
rebellious; instead, her dignity lies in endurance and restraint. This aligns
with Romantic idealizations of moral purity, yet it also exposes their limits.
As Alfredo Bosi (1992) notes, Alencar often elevates individual ethics while
leaving oppressive systems intact, creating a dissonance between moral
sentiment and social transformation. Joana’s death thus functions not as
redemption but as indictment. Her disappearance confirms Roland Barthes’s
(1972) notion of characters as cultural signs: Joana signifies the cost of
maintaining social illusion.
Jorge and the Illusion of Merit
Jorge
embodies the fragile ideal of social merit. Unlike Romantic heroes defined by
moral autonomy, Jorge’s respectability depends on his ignorance regarding who
his mother was or is. His social position is made possible by the suppression
of his origins, revealing what Terry Eagleton (1996) describes as ideology’s
capacity to conceal its own foundations. Jorge’s suffering upon learning the
truth does not equal Joana’s loss; rather, it underscores the asymmetry of
sacrifice within hierarchical systems.
Jorge’s
trajectory illustrates Candido’s (1987) claim that Brazilian Romanticism often
dramatizes personal conflicts that mirror collective moral failures people in
different social sphere avoid discussing or making visible. His apparent
mobility exposes the illusion of merit in a society structured by lineage and
race. He does not actively oppress Joana, yet he benefits from her erasure,
making him a passive participant in systemic injustice.
Secondary Characters as Ideological Agents
While
Joana and Jorge anchor the emotional core of Mãe, secondary characters
such as Dr. Lima, Peixoto, Sr. Gomes, and Elisa function as ideological agents
who sustain the social order the tragedy depends upon and describes for the
reader or drama viewer. Rather than serving as antagonists, they embody the
mechanisms through which injustice is normalized in that period of history.
Dr.
Lima represents institutional rationality and enlightened authority. Educated
and compassionate, he recognizes suffering but never challenges its causes. His
interventions are pragmatic rather than transformative, exemplifying what
Eagleton (1996) identifies as bourgeois humanism: ethical concern without
structural critique. Dr. Lima reassures the audience and the readers that the
social system he is part of is reasonable and fair, even as it destroys Joana.
Peixoto,
by contrast, symbolizes utilitarian adaptation. He understands the social rules
governing legitimacy and navigates them opportunistically. His moral
flexibility reveals how injustice persists not through cruelty but through
convenience. Peixoto exposes the transactional logic underlying social survival
in a slaveholding society.
Sr.
Gomes embodies patriarchal law and the authority of appearances. His judgments
are rooted in lineage, honor, and social legitimacy rather than ethical
substance. He functions as a gatekeeper of respectability, illustrating why
Joana’s truth must remain unspeakable. For Sr. Gomes, morality is genealogical,
not humane. Sr. Gomes appears as a puppet of the enslaving system all the
characters live in.
Elisa
represents conditional love shaped by social conformity. While affectionate and
sincere, her feelings for Jorge are constrained by class ideology. Elisa
reveals how women may simultaneously suffer under and reinforce patriarchal
norms. Her character demonstrates that even romantic affection operates within
rigid social boundaries, reinforcing Lukács’s (1971) concept of “typical
characters” whose private lives reflect broader social contradictions.
Together,
these characters form an ideological chorus: Dr. Lima rationalizes, Peixoto
negotiates, Sr. Gomes legitimizes, and Elisa normalizes. Joana’s death is not
caused by a single villain but by a system in which everyone fulfills their
role.
Maternal Sacrifice and Social Critique
The
title Mãe foregrounds motherhood as both sacred and problematic. Alencar
elevates maternal love while exposing how society denies full motherhood to
enslaved women. This paradox aligns with Adrienne Rich’s (1976) distinction
between motherhood as institution and motherhood as lived experience. Joana
lives motherhood as devotion and loss, while society instrumentalizes it to
preserve order.
Silence
emerges as a central motif. Joana’s silence protects Jorge but annihilates her
identity, suggesting that social harmony is achieved through moral erasure. The
play thus transforms melodrama into critique, revealing the ethical cost of
maintaining appearances.
Conclusion
Mãe
stands as one of José de Alencar’s most ethically complex dramatic works.
Through its melodramatic structure, symbolic characterization, and ideological
tension, the play exposes the contradictions of nineteenth-century Brazilian
society regarding slavery, class, and motherhood. Joana’s sacrifice reveals the
human cost of social illusion, while Jorge and the secondary characters
demonstrate how injustice is sustained through normalization rather than
cruelty. Positioned between Romantic sentiment and realist critique, Mãe
compels readers and audiences to confront the moral foundations of
respectability itself.
San José, Costa Rica
Saturday, January 24,
2026
📚 References
Barthes, R. (1972). Mythologies.
Hill and Wang.
Bosi, A. (1992). História concisa da
literatura brasileira. Cultrix.
Brooks, P. (1976). The melodramatic imagination. Yale University Press.
Candido, A. (1975). Formação da literatura brasileira. Martins Fontes.
Candido, A. (1987). Literature and society. Edusp.
Eagleton, T. (1996). Literary theory: An introduction. Blackwell.
Gilbert, S. M., & Gubar, S. (1979). The madwoman in the attic. Yale
University Press.
Lukács, G. (1971). The theory of the novel. MIT Press.
Rich, A. (1976). Of woman born. W. W. Norton.
Schwarz, R. (2000). Misplaced ideas. Verso.
Character Analysis of Mãe by José de Alencar
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