Italo-Paulista
Paulistalian
  • íntalo-baolista
  • paulistaliano
Native toBrazil
RegionSão Paulo
EthnicityCaipira
Italian Brazilians
Pidgin, Romance based
  • Italo-Paulista
Official status
Official language in
none
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)

The Italo-Paulista (Íntalo-baolista), also known as Paulistalian,[1] is a language that blends Italian dialects with the Caipira dialect. It was widely spoken by Italian immigrants and their descendants until the early 1960s in São Paulo State, especially in the Greater São Paulo region. Italo-Paulista or Paulistalian was commonly spoken on the streets of São Paulo.[2]

In 1911, the poet Oswald de Andrade, of Portuguese descent, under the Italian pseudonym "Annibale Scipione," created the magazine Cartas D’Abax’O Pigues, using language as a means of publication. Consequently, in 1915, the Brazilian magazine O Queixoso used the expression "língua do Abaixo Piques" ("Abaixo Piques language") to promote the Italo-Paulista publication La Divina Increnca by Juó Bananère.[3]

History

At the beginning of the 20th century, Italian and its dialects were spoken almost as much as Portuguese in São Paulo, influencing the formation of the current Paulista dialect. With influences from the Caipira language, native to São Paulo, the Italo-Paulista was created by the thousands of Italian immigrants who settled in the state. Later, this language became extensively documented by authors such as Oswald de Andrade and Juó Bananère.[4]

...(with "Italiano maccheronico") we are thus faced with a particular use of the Italian immigrant's language. Italian which is undoubtedly unique in its kind, and caricatures the dialect "caipira" paulistano mixed with the dialectal varieties of popular Italian.Popular precisely because São Paulo was a melting-pot of influences reflected in the people's language... E. Carnevale

After the publication of Cartas D’Abax’O Pigues, it began to be portrayed as a "macarronic" language, with different definitions such as a language composed of a mixture of others;[5] incomprehensible,[6] etc. However not to be confused with the more strongly conserved Talian dialect, which is more strongly preserved, primarily based on Venetian lexicon and grammar, with contributions from other languages of northern Italy. Talian is spoken by more isolated communities in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina, as well as in certain areas of Paraná, Mato Grosso, and Espírito Santo. In contrast, Italo-Paulista was socially a more distinctly urban code-switching, often fading over time according to the speaker.

Italians in São Paulo

Descendants of Italians represent 34% of the Paulistas, totaling more than 13 million people.[7] In the city of São Paulo, the Italian population is one of the strongest in the world, with a presence throughout the municipality. Out of the 12 million inhabitants of the capital, approximately 5 million have full or partial Italian ancestry, surpassing the number of Italian descendants in any Italian city (the largest city in Italy is Rome, with 2.5 million inhabitants).[8][9]

Every year, people of Italian descent gather in neighborhoods in São Paulo such as Bixiga, Brás, and Mooca, as well as in various other municipalities in the state, to promote traditional festivals. Among the most well-known festivals are the Feast of Saint Vito, Feast of San Gennaro, Italian Colony Festival of Quiririm, Polenta Festival of Santa Olímpia, etc.

Examples

Italian and several dialects of the Italian Peninsula influenced the Portuguese of Brazil in the areas with the highest concentration of immigrants, as in the case of Sao Paulo. There the coexistence between Portuguese and Italian has created a much more open and less nasalized speech than the Portuguese of Rio de Janeiro. The diversity of the language among Italian immigrants resulted in a way of speaking substantially different from the Caipira, which was predominant in the region before the arrival of Italians. The new speech was forged by the blending of Calabrian, Neapolitan, Venetian, Portuguese, and Caipira dialects.

In the songs by the Italian-Brazilian Adoniran Barbosa, the son of immigrants from Cavarzere (Venezia), the "Italian Samba" song is a good representative of foreign speaking in Brazil. With a typically Brazilian rhythm, the author mixes Portuguese and Italian, demonstrating what was happening and still occurs in some neighborhoods of Sao Paulo with the Italo-Paulista:

Poetry Sonetto Futuriste by Juó Bananère

Italo-Paulista Italian Portuguese English
Tegno una brutta paxó,

P'rus suos gabello gôr di banana,

I p'rus suos zoglios uguali dus lampió

La da igregia di Santanna.

È mesimo una perdiçó,

Ista bunita intaliana,

Che faiz alembrá os gagnó

Da guerre tripolitana.

Tê uns lindo pesigno

Uguali c'os passarigno,

Che stó avuáno nu matto;

I inzima da gara d'ella,

Té una pinta amarella

Uguali d'un carrapatto

Ho una grande passione,

Per i tuoi capelli del colore di una banana,

E per i tuoi occhi come l'illuminazione di una lanterna

Dalla chiesa di Santana.

È davvero una tentazione,

Questa bella italiana,

Che fa venire in mente i guadagni

Della guerra tripolitana.

Ha dei graziosi piedini

Come gli uccelli,

Che volano tra i cespugli;

E sul suo viso,

C'è un neo giallo,

Simile a una zecca.

Tenho uma grande paixão,

Pelos seus cabelos cor de banana,

E pelos seus olhos iguais a um lampião

Lá da igreja de Santana.

É mesmo uma perdição,

Essa bonita italiana,

Que faz lembrar os ganhos

Da guerra tripolitana.

Tem uns lindos pezinhos

Iguais aos passarinhos,

Que estão voando no mato;

E em cima da cara dela,

Tem uma pinta amarela

Igual a um carrapato

I have a great passion,

For your hair the color of a banana,

And for your eyes like a lantern's illumination

From the church of Santana.

It's truly a temptation,

This beautiful Italian,

That brings to mind the gains

Of the Tripolitan war.

She has lovely little feet

Like the birds,

Flying in the bushes;

And on her face,

There's a yellow mole,

Resembling a tick.

See also

  • Adoniran Barbosa, composer in Italo-Paulista dialect
  • Carcamano, the dated pejorative term for Italians in Brazil
  • Cocoliche, the analogous Spanish-Italian interlanguage in the River Plate area

References

  1. SP, © Sesc (2006-07-10). "Juó Bananére, a divina irreverência". portal.sescsp.org.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  2. Percursos do moderno e do nacional em Oswald de Andrade (PDF). p. 29.
  3. Scabin, Rafael Cesar; Maggio, Giliola (2020-12-31). "Houve um dialeto ítalo-paulistano?". Revista de Italianística (in Portuguese) (40): 5–18. doi:10.11606/issn.2238-8281.i40p5-18. ISSN 2238-8281.
  4. "Il linguaggio maccheronico in Juó Bananére"(p.58-61)
  5. "macaronic | Word of the Day | January 21, 2021". Dictionary.com. 2021-01-21. Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  6. "macarrónica".
  7. "Ano da Itália no Brasil será comemorado em 2012". www.al.sp.gov.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  8. "Tudo sobre São Paulo SP". EncontraSP. Archived from the original on March 23, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  9. "2024 é ponto de virada na relação Itália-Brasil, diz embaixador". UOL (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2023-11-25. Retrieved 2024-01-07.

Bibliography

  • Carnevale, Edoardo. La condizione dell’emigrante italiano nella città di São Paulo: testi e contesti di rappresentazione dello spazio raccontato Universita' di Milano. Milano, 2014.
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