Geni e o Zepelim


Geni e o Zepelim is a Brazilian MPB song, composed and recorded by Chico Buarque for his 1978 album Ópera do Malandro, the soundtrack to the eponymous musical play, in which the song's plot is set; it is also part of its soundtrack. A :pt:Ópera do Malandro |film adaptation was released in 1986.
The song has become relevant enough that the refrain "joga pedra na Geni" has been referenced in situations where people are victims of moral patrolling.

Composition

The lyrics are hepta-syllabic rhyming verses with strict meter, and are about Geni, a prostitute who was ostracized by the townspeople. After a zeppelin approaches the town and its pilot threatens to attack it, the ship's pilot demands Geni to sleep with him so he will spare the town, which she does. The populace temporarily treat Geni differently. The day after, she returns home and is immediately persecuted just as she was before.

Inspiration

Some sources suggest Geni could have been inspired by the homonymous character from Nelson Rodrigues's 1965 play Toda Nudez Será Castigada.

Meaning

Various sources believe the song to be critical of colonialism, imperialism and capitalism, and that Geni is a personification of the oppressed groups and peoples.
João Marcos Mateus Kogawa, of Revista Urutágua wrote about "Geni e o Zepelim":
Geni symbolizes silence, submission and non-voice, in the context of a system which prevents her from talking. Nevertheless, her other subject talks through the voice of the author, who portrays her as a martyr or heroine, who attacks her inquisitors' values.

Cover versions

Several artists have covered the song: