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X-WR-CALNAME:Let’s Talk About History!
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Let’s Talk About History!
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DTSTART:20170101T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170301T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170301T210000
DTSTAMP:20260504T191945
CREATED:20170216T141054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170918T060556Z
UID:211-1488393000-1488402000@ltah.uni.lu
SUMMARY:Remembering Portuguese Empire Today: From Public Memory to Personal Testimony
DESCRIPTION:Remembering Portuguese Empire Today: From Public Memory to Personal Testimony\n \nDate and time\n1s March 2017\n18:30 – 21:00 heure : Luxembourg\n\nAddress:\nUniversity of Luxembourg (Campus Belval)\nAvenue de l’Université\nMaison du Savoir\, Room 3.520\nEsch-sur-Alzette \n\nRegistration here: http://bit.ly/PortugueseEmpire\n\nDESCRIPTION\n  \nWhat about (re)visiting Lisbon in the next session of Let’s Talk about history? \n \nOur second conference this year invites you for a journey through the memories of the Portuguese Empire\, its symbolic representations and its role in the narratives of national identities in Portugal. How Lisbon\, and particularly the Belém quarter\, celebrates the “Empire’s Golden Age” and which are the dark legacies of the empire nowadays are important questions for the debate. \nA great opportunity to discuss the interplay between history\, memory and nation. We expect lots of you to join the debate! \nInternational guests: \nElsa Peralta\, University of Lisbon\, Portugal. \nTeresa Pinheiro\, Chemnitz University of Technology in Germany. \nPart I – Teresa Pinheiro \nAs in 1975 the last Portuguese colonies found their way into independence\, Portugal looked back on an over 500 years old colonial empire. One way or the other\, the long lasting epoch of colonialism has always been a cornerstone in Portuguese narratives of national identity. \nIn my talk\, I will first outline the main colonial cycles in Portuguese history\, beginning with sixteenth-century Portuguese India\, moving then to the long epoch of colonial rule in Brazil from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century and ending with the shift of colonial ambitions to Africa after Brazil’s independence in 1822. In a second step\, I will address the colonial politics of the Portuguese Estado Novo under Oliveira Salazar\, focussing on the symbolic practices of representation of the empire. As we will see\, the politics of memory during the Estado Novo were very much engaged in incorporating the age of discovery into the homogeneous narrative of national identity in order to legitimize the colonial presence in Africa. \nTeresa Pinheiro is a professor for Iberian Studies at Chemnitz University of Technology in Germany. She has received her PhD in Cultural Anthropology with a thesis on representations of Brazil in sixteenth-century colonial accounts. Main research fields: Iberian Cultural Studies\, Memory Studies\, National Narratives and Migration. Some publications: „Memoria de la República en las transiciones democráticas ibéricas” in: Pasajes de pensamiento contemporáneo\, 48\, 49-64\, 2015; “O retorno dos retornados. A construção de memória do passado recente na série televisiva Depois do Adeus“ in: Elias Torres\, ed.\, Estudos da AIL em Literatura\, História e Cultura Portuguesas. Santiago de Compostela 2015\, 279-290; “Das portugiesische Kolonialreich” in: Hermann Hiery\, ed.\, Lexikon zur Überseegeschichte. Stuttgart 2015\, 657-658; “Die Nelkenrevolution im 21. Jahrhundert: Wandel einer erinnerungspolitischen Praxis” in: Janett Reinstädler\, Henry Thorau (eds.)\, Die Nelkenrevolution und ihre Folgen. Berlin 2014\, 17-32; “Facetten des erinnerungskulturellen Umgangs mit dem Estado Novo in Portugal” in: Neue Politische Literatur\, 55\, 1\, 2010\, 7-22. \nPart II – Elsa Peralta\nI will take on the central place of the age of discoveries in contemporary Portuguese memory culture to show how national public space\, especially in the capital Lisbon\, is saturated with heritage and museum representations alluding to the empire’s golden age. I will take the example of the Belém quarter in Lisbon as a paradigmatic case of this representation\, begun at the end of the nineteenth century\, intensified during the Estado Novo and continued in the democratic period\, which shows that imperial history is one of the main cornerstones of Portuguese national identity to the present day. \nThis history of conquest and heroism is however tarnished by the tragic events that accompanied the end of the African empire: the colonial wars and the massive and sudden exodus of settlers who lived and worked in the African colonies. I will finish my presentation with a debate on the dark legacies of the end of the Portuguese empire and with a reflection on its place in the imperial memory complex of the Portuguese nation today\, also addressing the private voices of those who had to cope with these legacies. \nElsa Peralta\, PhD in Anthropology (ISCSP-UTL\, 2006)\, is a FCT research fellow at the Centre for Comparative Studies (CEC)\, School of Arts & Humanities\, University of Lisbon\, Portugal. Her work draws on crossed perspectives from anthropology\, memory studies and postcolonial studies and focuses on the intersection between private and public modes of recall of past events\, in particular of the colonial past. She was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute of Social Sciences (ICS-UL) with a research project on the memory and forgetting of Portuguese colonial empire in postcolonial Portugal. In CEC she coordinates the Research Line “Legacies of Empire and Colonialism in Comparative Perspective” and is currently working on the project “Narratives of loss\, war and trauma: Portuguese cultural memory and the end of empire”. Her works include the edited volumes Heritage and Identity: Engagement and Demission in Contemporary Society\, Routledge\, 2009 (with Marta Anico) andCidade e Império: Dinâmicas coloniais e reconfigurações pós-coloniais\, Edições 70\, 2013 (with Nuno Domingos). She was the curator and Scientific Coordinator of the Exhibition “Return – Traces of Memory” produced by EGEAC\, City Council of Lisbon. \nAfter the conference\, we invite everybody to join us for a short cocktail.  \nProgramme: \n\n18h30: registration and welcoming words\n18h45: conference\n19h45: discussion\n20h15: cocktail
URL:https://ltah.uni.lu/calendar/revisiting-lisbon/
LOCATION:Université du Luxembourg – Maison du Savoir (MSA)\, 2\, avenue de l'Université\, Esch-sur-Alzette\, 4365\, Luxembourg
CATEGORIES:Past Events
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