The rubbish AI animation for the dumbed down on this channel makes a mockery of Fernando Pessoa…. One of the greatest writers of the 20th century. Read the book!
As a Pessoa myself, I get asked a lot if I'm related to him but unfortunately he didn't have close relatives or kids. However, he left to the world a rich and intricate literary work. Such an honor to share the surname and speak the same language as he did.
@@badassbillyb tough question, but in no particular order I would say: -Jose Saramago; -William Shakespeare ; -George Orwell; -Ernest Hemingway. These is my top without looking from a historical perspective. If this latter parameter is accounted for, I would exchange Saramago with Luís Vaz de Camões, Orwell with homero, and Hemingway with liev Tolstoy
As a Portuguese, I can assure you that he is one of the most brilliant poets I know. Unique, different, direct, he produced incredible work, helped by alcohol and drugs. However, if you like poetry, want to learn Portuguese or more about our culture, Fernando Pessoa is undoubtedly a must-read.
If one can write letters as someone else, in a language other than their native one, at 6 years old, regardless of how well off their family is, I doubt you can deny there is genius at work there
Thank you so much for this wonderful video about our great writer Fernando Pessoa! It's really special to see him recognized for his work and his peculiar personality.
OMG, this is one of my favorite Ted-Ed videos yet. The topic is fantastic, the narrator is amazing and the animation is just breathtaking. Thank you so much Ted-Ed!❤
Pessoa's "Mensagem" popularized the concept of the "Fifth Empire", a Portuguese global realm of the mind that was going to bring world peace. This is today linked with various mystical and esoteric philosophies and teachings. The only book of his that I have read is "The Anarchist Banker" a very interesting little philosophical work structured as an ancient Greek Socratic dialogue. I'd definately recommend it.
One of the things about him, in a very Pessoa fashion, is that the works he signed as his Heteronyms are much better than the works he signed as Pessoa. I really recommend you to read all his poems by Caeiro and Alvaro de Campos (specially the "Tabacco shop" or "Tabacaría", one of the greatest poems ever written). Together with his book of disquiet (Libro do Desassossego).
@@saidtoshimaru1832I mean, yeah some of his heteronyms may have been better than him, but Pessoa was a really good poet, specially in Mensagem (Mar Português, Mostrengo, Ulisses, Nevoeiro, D.Sebastião Rei de Portugal ,etc). I'd like to recomend "Quando Vier a Primavera(When spring comes)" and "A Realidade é uma Descoberta Permanente(Reality is a permanent discovery)" from Alberto Caeiro, "Para ser grande, se todo(To be big, be whole)"[bad translation, but it's the best I can] a really cute, small poem by Ricardo Reis, and "Aniversário (Birthday)", "Lisbon revisitated" and "poema em linha reta(poem in a straight line)" by Álvaro de Campos, my personal favorite
@@filipesilva5063 Of course que was a good poet, but it seems that as Alvaro de Campos que was more free to express himself and experiment with the form. With his own persona, que was constrained to the poet he thought he had to be.
To have shared Lisbon as city of birth with Fernando Pessoa (albeit 40 years after his death) is simply a great hono, but to read Pessoa is more so! What brilliant, fascinating soul he was! Thank you for showcasing Fernando in all of his fascinating personas. He would of course, I question the worthiness of it all! ❤FP❤
I'm Portuguese so when the video popped up I just had to come over. We study him throughout our school years. Sometimes it's a huge nightmare exactly because he's so many people at the same time, with consistency in the writing.
This came out right around the time I found out about Pessoa and started reading his Book of Disquiet. I first read his long Poem Antinous on the Gutenberg website and fell in love. The fact he also knew and spoke of my other favorite poet, Constantine Cavafy, gives me goosebumps. I found out about him after the pandemic and his poetry really changed my life. The timing couldn't be more perfect ❤ Thanks TED for a wonderful video!
I don't think I have ever felt as deep a connection to an auther as when I read through The Book of Disquiet. I still feel it in every fibre of my being.
Thank you Ted-Ed for this video about Pessoa! Undoubtedly one of if not the most important and remarkable Portuguese poet of all time! For the curious, go and read the "Carta a Adolfo Casais Monteiro", a letter in which he reveals the genesis of his 3 main heteronyms to a friend.
There’s a memorial of him at his old high school in South Africa. I saw it there when I went for an interview. The school’s name is Durban High School.
While reading the "Book of Disquiet," you don't need a highlighter; the whole book is poetry. I obstinately think he is one of the greatest writers of all time. "Don't believe what you feel unless you stop feeling. Don't trust what you think unless you stop thinking." - Pessoa
The same thing occurs to me; I have many OCs, and I write numerous poems, histories, and other texts through these OCs. Each OC has a name, personality, appearance, and autobiography totally divergent from one another, and sometimes these OCs converse with each other and with me too. Like Pessoa, I don't have control over them. ~ Vinicius
I suspect he could have had disocitive identity disorder, from his behavoirs, the complexity of the alternate personas and with how young this behavoir started.
I wonder if he had some form of dissociative identity disorder. according to him, all of his personas felt like distinct and separate people living inside his head. he also seemed to have little to no control over how they acted. some of them even claimed that they were the “real pessoa” instead of him. his “heteronyms” appear to have started at a very early age, which is very common in DID. makes me wonder what modern medicine would think of the guy
Once a friend visited him only to have one heteronym ask him to visit later as Fernando was not home at the moment. I would be surprised if it wasn't DID or an adjacent condition.
I remember in AP Lit, we had to do a massive project based on a poet of our choice and I chose Fernando Pessoa because I wanted to get closer to my heritage. Wished this video was posted earlier though… 😔
I'm Brazilian, and my favourite Pessoa's heteronym is Alberto Caiero. From O Guardador de rebanhos: "Eu nunca guardei rebanhos, Mas é como se os guardasse. Minha alma é como um pastor, Conhece o vento e o sol E anda pela mão das Estacões A seguir e a olhar" FP/AC
My great grandfather, lived in Daman and in Diu when he was a kid, and I would love to visit and get to know more about India and those cities in particular.
Very cool and all, but having Portuguese exams with his poems in highschool was no fun 😭😭 Some exams would ask you to figure out which of his heteronyms wrote a given text.
As u mentioned the character that don't exist ,for me it's my biography cause I'm an bookkeeper also and what he writes about him is almost all related to my life and thinking when he said the legder on my table and the calm view from my window actually it's happens to in reality when I was sitting in bookstore and the same scenario happens while reading the same paragraph then i realised it's not anyone who don't exist in his entire book it's me here a bookkeeper from Kashmir India i hve alot to say about this book but i can't express into words it's actually my current read ad I'm reading it slowly i don't wanna finish this treasure
Speaking Portuguese makes me feel fortunate because I can read Fernando Pessoa and Machado de Assis (along witth so many other great authors) in the original. One poem from Alvaro de Campos that stays with me always is the incredible, sixteen page long, "Ode Marítima" that feels totally different every time it is read.
I have a friend with Dissociative Identity Disorder and this sounds similar but maybe not quite? I’m not sure. Has it been ruled out that he didn’t have that disorder??
The fact that "pessoa" in Portuguese means "person" reflects how perfectly genius Pessoa's plan was.
Not really, it was his father’s name. So he had no choosing it…
@@pedrosabino6441 you didn't get what he was trying to say
The animations on TedED just keep getting better 10/10
They almost always hire a different animator/studio for each video and they credit them in the description!
The rubbish AI animation for the dumbed down on this channel makes a mockery of Fernando Pessoa…. One of the greatest writers of the 20th century. Read the book!
I was hoping someone would make a video about him, this did not disappoint.
When did Ted-Ed ever disappoint?
The last quote is so beautiful
Now imagine 300 and more of that beautiful quote in the same book. He’s just an unbelievable writer.
@Phattadon02 the book of disquiet right? I might pick it up soon
Literature teacher here, and I'm sure using this in my class when talking about Modernism and Pessoa 😁
Aww I wish I was your student!
So cool
As a Pessoa myself, I get asked a lot if I'm related to him but unfortunately he didn't have close relatives or kids.
However, he left to the world a rich and intricate literary work.
Such an honor to share the surname and speak the same language as he did.
Que fixe
As a portuguese I might be biased, but Fernando Pessoa is easily one of the top 5 writers ever.
All top 5 to some
@@no_mnom Touchê ahah
Who would the other 4 be?
@@badassbillyb tough question, but in no particular order I would say: -Jose Saramago; -William Shakespeare ; -George Orwell; -Ernest Hemingway. These is my top without looking from a historical perspective. If this latter parameter is accounted for, I would exchange Saramago with Luís Vaz de Camões, Orwell with homero, and Hemingway with liev Tolstoy
The 4 is the same person
as a Portuguese, as soon as I saw the title I knew this was about Fernando Pessoa
As a Brazilian, me too!
Same here! Who else?
Same here!
Me too
The art style of the video perfectly depicts the multitude of Pessoa's being and writing
As a Portuguese, I can assure you that he is one of the most brilliant poets I know. Unique, different, direct, he produced incredible work, helped by alcohol and drugs. However, if you like poetry, want to learn Portuguese or more about our culture, Fernando Pessoa is undoubtedly a must-read.
This man is singled handedly responsible for half of my Portuguese and literature assignments here in Brazil, loved the books regardless 😅
And here I can't find just my own literary voice. And this guy had 50
I first learned about Pessoa from a boardgame with the same name, in which you play as his different personas. Fascinating guy.
If one can write letters as someone else, in a language other than their native one, at 6 years old, regardless of how well off their family is, I doubt you can deny there is genius at work there
Thank you so much for this wonderful video about our great writer Fernando Pessoa! It's really special to see him recognized for his work and his peculiar personality.
OMG, this is one of my favorite Ted-Ed videos yet. The topic is fantastic, the narrator is amazing and the animation is just breathtaking. Thank you so much Ted-Ed!❤
Wonderful revelation of the breadth of Pessoa's prodigious talent. Love his ego-less descriptions of his 'real' self.
Thanks ted Ed for beautiful narration and animation. You made my day ❤
you never run out of new animation styles amazing
this is the first time I hear about the author
I'm portuguese and immediately after reading the title of the video Pessoa came to my mind. And it was correct! He was an amazing writer!
whoever created those visuals deserve a Nobel Prize, for real!
This was magical. The narrator, animation and content ❤
Pessoa's "Mensagem" popularized the concept of the "Fifth Empire", a Portuguese global realm of the mind that was going to bring world peace. This is today linked with various mystical and esoteric philosophies and teachings.
The only book of his that I have read is "The Anarchist Banker" a very interesting little philosophical work structured as an ancient Greek Socratic dialogue. I'd definately recommend it.
One of the things about him, in a very Pessoa fashion, is that the works he signed as his Heteronyms are much better than the works he signed as Pessoa. I really recommend you to read all his poems by Caeiro and Alvaro de Campos (specially the "Tabacco shop" or "Tabacaría", one of the greatest poems ever written). Together with his book of disquiet (Libro do Desassossego).
@@saidtoshimaru1832I mean, yeah some of his heteronyms may have been better than him, but Pessoa was a really good poet, specially in Mensagem (Mar Português, Mostrengo, Ulisses, Nevoeiro, D.Sebastião Rei de Portugal ,etc).
I'd like to recomend "Quando Vier a Primavera(When spring comes)" and "A Realidade é uma Descoberta Permanente(Reality is a permanent discovery)" from Alberto Caeiro,
"Para ser grande, se todo(To be big, be whole)"[bad translation, but it's the best I can] a really cute, small poem by Ricardo Reis, and "Aniversário (Birthday)", "Lisbon revisitated" and "poema em linha reta(poem in a straight line)" by Álvaro de Campos, my personal favorite
@@filipesilva5063 Of course que was a good poet, but it seems that as Alvaro de Campos que was more free to express himself and experiment with the form. With his own persona, que was constrained to the poet he thought he had to be.
To have shared Lisbon as city of birth with Fernando Pessoa (albeit 40 years after his death) is simply a great hono, but to read Pessoa is more so! What brilliant, fascinating soul he was! Thank you for showcasing Fernando in all of his fascinating personas. He would of course, I question the worthiness of it all!
❤FP❤
Good explanation... but the animation is what really takes the cake. Very very cute
Possibly the greatest poet ever
The music in the background was an awesome compliment to the storytelling of this enigmatic character
I'm Portuguese so when the video popped up I just had to come over. We study him throughout our school years. Sometimes it's a huge nightmare exactly because he's so many people at the same time, with consistency in the writing.
This came out right around the time I found out about Pessoa and started reading his Book of Disquiet. I first read his long Poem Antinous on the Gutenberg website and fell in love. The fact he also knew and spoke of my other favorite poet, Constantine Cavafy, gives me goosebumps. I found out about him after the pandemic and his poetry really changed my life. The timing couldn't be more perfect ❤ Thanks TED for a wonderful video!
How can one produce such incredibly intricate animation? I'm in awe!
The opening quote gives the same as Socrates’ “I am the wisest man alive, for I know one thing, and that is that I know nothing”
The animaton in this one was simply astonishing!
Dear TedEd please make more videos about books and authors of why you should read thank you
Beautiful video, amazing animation!
Glad to see one of the greatest writers of my language in the TedEd, cheers from Brazil.
That was really good animation. I have not heard about this author in a long time.
Amazing content and amazing animation , I will forever love ted-ed videos
I don't think I have ever felt as deep a connection to an auther as when I read through The Book of Disquiet. I still feel it in every fibre of my being.
These animations are amazing
Thank you Ted-Ed for this video about Pessoa! Undoubtedly one of if not the most important and remarkable Portuguese poet of all time!
For the curious, go and read the "Carta a Adolfo Casais Monteiro", a letter in which he reveals the genesis of his 3 main heteronyms to a friend.
There’s a memorial of him at his old high school in South Africa. I saw it there when I went for an interview. The school’s name is Durban High School.
Great video as always and I love this animators work!
I’m not a psychologist, but that sounds a lot like Dissociative Identity Disorder to me
While reading the "Book of Disquiet," you don't need a highlighter; the whole book is poetry. I obstinately think he is one of the greatest writers of all time.
"Don't believe what you feel unless you stop feeling. Don't trust what you think unless you stop thinking." - Pessoa
The same thing occurs to me; I have many OCs, and I write numerous poems, histories, and other texts through these OCs. Each OC has a name, personality, appearance, and autobiography totally divergent from one another, and sometimes these OCs converse with each other and with me too. Like Pessoa, I don't have control over them. ~ Vinicius
I suspect he could have had disocitive identity disorder, from his behavoirs, the complexity of the alternate personas and with how young this behavoir started.
English teacher here (and a completely passionated person about Pessoa also) and FOR SURE I'll use this in my lessons!!!!!!
The art of this video is very beautiful and inspired ❤
This guy is proof that you are not stuck with who are. Great Video!
INCREDIBLE animation, my mind is blown!
Every writer has their own journey. This one is amazing and haunting.
I adore these literary videos!! More please, TedEd!
Certainly one of the most creative and disciplined writers in global literature. A prominent figure of Modernism 🎩
The last quote, it was awesome 😻💟
Thank you for reminding me how much I used to love his work 💖
❤Awesome as always thanks
As a portuguese, I can tell you that he is everywhere in Portugal, truly a legendary writer
WOW... Just WOW.... Love this.... ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
The animation is beautiful ngl
....I know myself only as a symphony ❤️❤️ what a great self description
I want to be able to write in 70 different ways. This is so cool
My personal favorite author
Fascinating, thanks TED Ed.
Thank you!!
I just picked up the Book of Disquiet from the library less than 24 hours ago. Weird
same!!! crazy 🤣
love that Pessoa denied himself to be everyone else
thanks for this amazing video, and respect for the arabic translator
I wonder if he had some form of dissociative identity disorder. according to him, all of his personas felt like distinct and separate people living inside his head. he also seemed to have little to no control over how they acted. some of them even claimed that they were the “real pessoa” instead of him. his “heteronyms” appear to have started at a very early age, which is very common in DID. makes me wonder what modern medicine would think of the guy
Once a friend visited him only to have one heteronym ask him to visit later as Fernando was not home at the moment.
I would be surprised if it wasn't DID or an adjacent condition.
My favorite writer ever 🤍 and this animation is so beautiful
No offence but he feels like he both a great writer and a insane person.
Thats not an offense thats a fact. (I'm portuguese, btw.)
I remember in AP Lit, we had to do a massive project based on a poet of our choice and I chose Fernando Pessoa because I wanted to get closer to my heritage. Wished this video was posted earlier though… 😔
I'm Brazilian, and my favourite Pessoa's heteronym is Alberto Caiero. From O Guardador de rebanhos: "Eu nunca guardei rebanhos, Mas é como se os guardasse. Minha alma é como um pastor, Conhece o vento e o sol E anda pela mão das Estacões A seguir e a olhar" FP/AC
I really want to learn the Portuguese language and its wonderful culture. Lots of love from India.
My great grandfather, lived in Daman and in Diu when he was a kid, and I would love to visit and get to know more about India and those cities in particular.
Fernando Pessoa is simply the best writer of all time. I've never read a work that resonated with me on such a deep level as his did. ❤️
Very cool and all, but having Portuguese exams with his poems in highschool was no fun 😭😭
Some exams would ask you to figure out which of his heteronyms wrote a given text.
As u mentioned the character that don't exist ,for me it's my biography cause I'm an bookkeeper also and what he writes about him is almost all related to my life and thinking when he said the legder on my table and the calm view from my window actually it's happens to in reality when I was sitting in bookstore and the same scenario happens while reading the same paragraph then i realised it's not anyone who don't exist in his entire book it's me here a bookkeeper from Kashmir India i hve alot to say about this book but i can't express into words it's actually my current read ad I'm reading it slowly i don't wanna finish this treasure
"I only know myself as a symphony." wow
Great video!
I'm surprised, TedEd hasn't done a video on the Foundation series by Isaac Asimov. A literal masterpiece!
More book recommendation videos 💕
very interesting, thanks.
I will always take Alberto Caeiro with me in my ❤ it’s truly beautiful
So cool.
so he had a lot of OC's
Speaking Portuguese makes me feel fortunate because I can read Fernando Pessoa and Machado de Assis (along witth so many other great authors) in the original. One poem from Alvaro de Campos that stays with me always is the incredible, sixteen page long, "Ode Marítima" that feels totally different every time it is read.
And here i thought i have a problem with my self being like this and some famous literature figure also experience this, guess im not alone.
this guy is the real life roger from american dad
Could this be a case of... I know it's not called that but I don't remember the actual name, so, Is this a case of multiple personality disorder??
Truly one of the writers ever
I own this book. Maybe I need to finally read it
I KNEW it was gonna be Fernando Pessoa.
Such a genius move !
I have a friend with Dissociative Identity Disorder and this sounds similar but maybe not quite? I’m not sure. Has it been ruled out that he didn’t have that disorder??
When they/them pronoun are the most applicable
ooh man i have heard abut this
Fascinating...Makes me wonder how Fernando earned from his works if he has so many names.
So he had multiple personality disorder because he himself was very self repressed and used it as a feature to write books. Intersting man.
Wow, an inspiring story of a life well lived truly!
I'm Fernando i'm Fernando I'm Fernando and I'm Spartacus
1935年11月30日数十人の作家が亡くなった。しかし、全員がペソアという作家が演じた作家でした。彼は6歳から別人として書き始めた。彼は芸術と文学の事業を立ち上げたが、借金を背負った。彼は一冊だけポルトガル語で本を出し、注目を浴びた。彼は自分自身をオーケストラとして表現した。
Fernando Pessoa has got to be my all time favourite.