A bookstore dedicated to female authors

by - April 12, 2017

 WOMEN WHO READ WOMEN

Aida grew up in a family where women read. As a child, she received her first book and since then, she had the idea of opening her own bookstore.
Confraria Vermelha (The Red Fraternity) located in Porto, is the only feminist bookstore in Portugal. Not only is it a place to buy books written by women, but it is also a space to pay tribute to feminine literature and talk about it.

"Each text is an island." This phrase was said in the last moments of the meeting, is a beautiful metaphor to describe the Leitoras de Pandora reading club sessions. It is late afternoon, in a quiet street in Porto and the participants are arriving. The environment is more than informal, it is homely. Aida Suarez, 35 years old, owner of the Confraria Vermelha, the only feminist bookstore in Portugal, wants to ensure everyone feels comfortable.

After all, it is here where they will share opinions, experiences, occasionally one or two confessions and above all, discuss books. Books, it’s always the books. That’s the passion (yes it is a passion) of these women who get together every last Thursday of the month in this place.

To have her own bookshop used to be an old dream of Aida, as old as when she learned how to read. "I think that I wanted a bookstore since I received my first book", says Aida. She grew up in a family of women. Women who read. This was her first big feminist influence, cemented, much later, with trips to Barcelona and Madrid, where she would come across feminist bookstores, which had existed for more than 40 years.

Why not open one in Portugal too? "It's not about taking advantage of the feminist cause visibility, not at all. I wished the Confraria to be mainly a bookstore which would pay tribute to so many female genius authors.” That’s why we don't only sell books on feminist themes. There are various collections of books written by women – history, children's literature, sexuality, philosophy, politics, travel, health or art – and a library to consult them.

From Aida’s willingness to put her dream into action, it only took a couple of years and a crowdfunding to give the project its final push. The bookstore finally opened doors in 2015. On the bookstore’s display window, Clarice Lispector, Virginia Wolf, the godmother of Confraria, and Florbela Espanca greeting the passers-by and inviting them to take a peek inside.

There are authors’ framed pictures everywhere, small objects with book quotes, a turntable in the back of the room with a Janis Joplin vinyl, coffee and tea machines, cookies on the table so that nothing is discussed on an empty stomach.

Everything is ready, the group is forming. This time, every reader brought a book that marked them. Aida initiated the discussion with presenting 2 new books. Women by Carol Rossetti and Las Chicas Son Querraras by Irene Cicico and Sergio Parra. From a hand to hand, they turned the pages and discussed the illustrations. The first to present her book was Sara Riobom, who did not just come to talk about Maria Teresa Horta, but also to read her work. By sharing an excerpt about the body, which is subjected to various interpretations, respectively whether it's a man or a woman’s body, the discussion focused on the way we perceive our own body. Maria Teresa is one of the women who has been on the shelves for a longer time and Aida couldn’t prevent herself from recommending the reading of Novas Cartas Portuguesas (New Portuguese Letters).
Maria João Coelho who was attending the club for the first time held the book “A Metáfora do Coração” by Maria Zambrano. “It is a philosophy of the heart”, that is how she justified her choice. The question followed “Why are women punished for being emotional?”. “To act with the heart can be an absolutely rational choice”, says Júlia Jardim from Minas Gerais, Brazil. There seems to be a consensus around the group about seeing the need to interpret emotionality as a strength and not as a weakness.

Marta Reis crossed the ocean to revisit Alexandra Lucas Coelho. Vai Brasil (Go Brazil) is the publication, travels are the motto. The choice was simple, travel books are a big part of Marta’s life growing up. “I have always seen my family travelling to remote places; I have always read books about this theme. It is fascinating to travel through the words of another person.”

Sara identified herself with Marta, a travel blogger, she goes alone everywhere. “It is such a big pleasure, it is a bigger availability for everything that is around us”, she assures. Aida, who just returned from a trip herself, had her first solo travel experience not a long time ago. “It was liberating!”, she confesses. “Every time I say I’m going to travel, I always hear the same question: why are you going alone, jokes Sara.
Moments are shared; there was a general laughter about a trip to Moscow where vodka was the only word understood and the only salvation.

The Brazilian Júlia brought Harper Lee’s “Não Matem a Cotovia” (“To Kill a Mockingbird”). There’s a discussion about childhood, the character’s growth, the growth of each one of us. “The first time that she felt that everyone wanted her to be less than who she really was, was at school”, says Júlia. The second book that Harper Lee did not want to release is a target of negative criticism describing it as a sloppier version of the first. “She wanted to be an author of a big book, one unique memorable work”, defended Aida. There is herbal tea break.
The herbal teas of Ana Hatherly, author and friend of Helena Topa, brought with her two books, visibly marked by time and by re-reads. 351 Tisanas and 463 Tisanas, two works that combine loose texts without connection between each other. They are small infusions of ideas, mantras, resolutions, and advices. Helena says that “they are like a Japanese haiku” and she picks five or six to read, ends up reading more. There are smiles across the room, they are taking notes of the end of the sentences. Not everyone knew about them, it is the surprise of the afternoon. “Every text of these is a small nature painting.” Again, a metaphor that fits the moment.

The authors mentioned are described as if they are friends. They leave a mark on life stages; help overcome the stages that were not so good, they always come to them when they need it the most. That is friendship, is it not? There’s more than talking about feminism, there’s talking about devotion to literature.

“The Confraria is a feminist project, in its creation, because we have by majority feminine authors. But men are welcome, we already had some of them participating in the Club and the conversation is always very good”. Explains the owner holding a book in her hand.

There are one piece of news left to discuss. “Jane Austen Reading Club”, which has already been adapted as a moving picture, is the chosen one. “Jane deserves an opportunity, she is always portrayed as a romantic author. But there’s another side that we have to explore here. She will be one of our next authors!”

The desire to deconstruct ideas is one of the mottos of these meetings. Beyond The Pandora Readers, there are other group activities happening regularly. In tertulias “Ler para Conviver” (Read in order to co-exist), the aim is to celebrate the birth of an author and to discuss her work. And to prove that we can talk about everything, there are scheduled reading sessions about...Harry Potter.

OTHER READING CLUBS
Pandora Readers is not the only reading club in Porto. “Conversas Para Lê-las” (Conversations to read them) is another club that gets together regularly to discuss the lesbian matter and the bookstore Flâneur also has its own reading club. In Lisbon, o “Chá de Letras” (Tea of letters) is an event that invites the participants to not only bring authors they admire, but also their own writings to discuss. O Instituto Cervantes in Lisbon also organizes events where they are read, the majority are Spanish authors.

Original Source: https://goo.gl/1c1wHf
Chosen by: Badriah.
Translated by: Badriah.
Revised by: Luísa.

When I saw a report about Confraria Vermelha on SIC, I knew I wanted to include it in this blog. Whether it qualifies to be  pop cult or not, it is a question I leave up to the readers. For me, pop culture can be anything we make it. In this article, we learn a lot about different authors and different books which I thought was interesting. It was written in a way that made me feel like I was part of the meeting. Confraria Vermelha for me is a great idea that deserve to become a popular culture topic because it showcases works of women, something that hasn't happened in the previous decades. I can’t help but think of Florbela Espanca and her struggle to get recognize by her fellow male poets and authors. You can read in her work how painful it was to her to not be able to break into or get noticed in the literature scene that was dominated by men.

- Badriah.


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