O Pasquim
O Pasquim was a Brazilian weekly newspaper published in Rio de Janeiro from 1969 to the mid 1970s.[1][2] It was critical of the military dictatorship and it is considered the founding periodical of Brazil's alternative press.[1][2]
The idea for the periodical began in 1968 after a meeting of cartoonist Jaguar with journalists Tarso de Castro and Sérgio Cabral. They were looking for an alternative to substitute Sergio Porto's tabloid A carapuça. The name was Jaguar's idea, inspired in the Italian folk-tale character Pasquino, who, according to the legend, used to write and tell stories in a major public square.
As the time went by, prominent figures such as Walter Campos de Carvalho, Ziraldo, Millôr Fernandes, Prósperi and Fortuna joined the team.
History
O Pasquim was established in 1969.[3] The first edition was published on June 26, 1969. From an initial circulation of twenty thousand copies, the periodical jumped to two hundred thousand copies in the mid-1970s. The paper ceased publication in 1991.[3]
References
- "IMPRENSA MARGINAL – Tropicália". Retrieved 2021-02-04.
- "O Pasquim (1969-1991) | Brasiliana". library.brown.edu. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
- "Rare Magazines and Newspapers". Brown University Library. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
- "Meio século do O Pasquim é celebrado em mostra no Sesc Ipiranga". Guia Folha (in Portuguese). 2019-11-15. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
External links
- Pasquim, A subversão do humor (Portuguese)
- Entrevista com Ziraldo (Portuguese)
- Entrevista com Lupicínio Rodrigues (Portuguese)
- Brasileiros em Roma (Portuguese)
- Leila Miccolis Brazilian Alternative Press Collection at the Special Collections Division at The University of Miami