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to think of culture and art beyond the aesthetic (and “aristocratic”) imperatives of early modernism. This was to be done through engaging in a politics for the masses – although there was no sign that such a politics would be about class, as it had been for the CAM only a decade earlier. This was a peculiar call to transition from writing fiction to a new sort of intellectual practice, whose place would be neither the aristocratic opera theater nor the bourgeois‐proletarian salon; it would be the university.

      Both Andrades shared in common an effort to appeal to young people. Although the Semana seemed more and more alienated and reactionary as it aged, both felt that in Brazil's youth there was hope for the future. At the same moment in which the Andrades positioned themselves to breathe new life into the movement of modernist advancement, a new generation of modern intellectuals was evolving, many of whom owed their perspectives to Mário de Andrade's crisis of conscience. The founding of the Department of Philosophy at the University of São Paulo, fostered by modernists, modernizers, and progressive descendants of the 1922 oligarchs, was crucial for the emergence of this new moment committed to the study of Brazilian culture. Its principal consequence was the formation of a certain intellectual radicalism, or in the words of literary critic Antonio Candido, a “modest radicalism that became a tradition that has produced positive effects” (Candido 1980, p. 103).

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