The Slum cover art

The Slum

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The Slum

Written by: Aluísio Azevedo
Narrated by: AI Voice Charles Owen
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Buy Now for ₹164.00

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This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. The cortiço wakes before its inhabitants do. Aluísio Azevedo describes the awakening in the opening pages of his 1890 novel with the language of a naturalist observing an organism: the tenement as a living thing, growing and breathing, generating the people who live inside it as much as containing them. The cortiço is not a setting. It is the novel's collective protagonist — a social body subject to the same biological and environmental laws that the naturalist tradition applies to individuals, extended here to the level of the community itself.

João Romão built it. He arrived from Portugal with nothing and made the accumulation of wealth the organizing principle of a life that has no other principle. The foundation of everything he builds is Bertoleza — a Black woman, formerly enslaved, who cooks and works and tends the business beside him, whose forged manumission papers give her the appearance of freedom while preserving her legal vulnerability. She believes she has found a life. He is waiting for the moment he no longer needs her.


Around this central indictment, the novel renders the cortiço's collective life in its full density — the Portuguese immigrants working their way upward or failing to, the Brazilian workers and freedpeople whose relationship to that upward mobility is organized by hierarchies that abolition has just formally but not substantively altered, and Jerônimo, the Portuguese worker who comes to the tenement industrious and leaves it transformed, remade by the music and the heat and the specific vitality of a Brazil that the naturalist method renders as an environment reshaping an organism.


The most morally serious novel of Brazilian naturalism — and one of the most unflinching accounts in any literature of what accumulation costs the people it uses.
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