arcádia, any of the 18th-century Portuguese literary societies that attempted to revive poetry in that country by urging a return to classicism. They were modeled after the Academy of Arcadia, which had been established in Rome in 1690 as an arbiter of Italian literary taste.
In 1756 António Dinis da Cruz e Silva and others established the Arcádia Lusitana, its first aim being the uprooting of Gongorism, a style studded with Baroque conceits and Spanish influence in general. Cruz e Silva’s mock-heroic poem O Hissope (1768), inspired by the French poet Nicolas Boileau’s mock epic Le Lutrin (1674), was a telling satirical document. Pedro António Correia Garção, the most prominent Arcadian, was an accomplished devotee of the Latin classical poet Horace. The bucolic verse of Dómingos dos Reis Quita signified a return to the native tradition of two centuries earlier. Sincerity and suffering spoke in the better-known Marília de Dirceu, pastoral love lyrics written by Tomás Antônio Gonzaga under the pseudonym Dirceu and published in three volumes (1792, 1799, 1812).
In 1790 a Nova Arcádia (“New Arcadia”) came into being, its two most distinguished members being the rival poets Manuel Maria Barbosa du Bocage, who is now remembered for a few outstanding sonnets, and José Agostinho de Macedo, known for his experiments with the epic form. Curvo Semedo was another New Arcadian of merit.
Cruz e Silva was sent to Brazil as a judge in 1776; there he helped stimulate Brazilian interest in the Arcadian movement, which gave rise to the so-called Minas school of epic and Neoclassical poets, which includes José Basílio da Gama and José de Santa Rita Durão.