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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The present article opens with a generic plea for the de-imperialization of Lusophone studies. A de-imperial turn should allow researchers to explore more thoroughly the experiences of diaspora and exile that an empire-centered history and its spin-offs have obfuscated; it should also help to de-essentialize depictions of Portuguese heritage and culture shaped by these narratives. Such a turn promises to address the multiple identifications, internal diversities, and racialized inequalities produced by the making and unmaking of empire. My contribution consists of a few ethnographic-historic case studies collected at the intersections of empire, post-empire, and diaspora. These include nineteenthcentury diasporic movements that brought Portuguese subjects to competing empires; past and present celebrations of heritage in diasporic contexts; culture wars around representations; and current directions in post-imperial celebrations and reparations.
Description
Keywords
Portugal plantations labor migrations heritage
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Bastos, C. (2020). Intersections of Empire, Post-Empire, and Diaspora: De-Imperializing Lusophone Studies. Journal of Lusophone Studies, 5 (1), 27-54
