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  • Dictatorship, liberation, t...
    Melo e Castro, Paul

    Journal of romance studies, 06/2013, Letnik: 13, Številka: 2
    Journal Article

    This article discusses the work of three Goa-based Lusophone writers active under the Estado Novo: Alberto de Menezes Rodrigues, Ananta Rau Sar Dessai and Telo de Mascarenhas. By comparing writings composed and published either side of the demise of Portuguese colonial rule in 1961, I map the fissiparous literary field of this little-studied period in Goa. I argue that Menezes Rodrigues displays a regime-compliant quietism before going on to indulge in social fantasy and effect a reinvestment in an identity rooted in the local vernacular, Konkani. Sar Dessai comes closest to a publicly subversive postcolonising intervention before adopting a pan-Indian outlook. Mascarenhas, for his part, exhibits the most complete oppositional stance open to Lusophone Goans but also the linguistic and cultural cost of political integration into India. Taken as a whole, compared to other emergent Lusophone cultures, the Portuguese-language literary scene that existed and subsisted in Goa proves eccentric and ambivalent. Keywords: Goan literature; Portuguese India; Alberto de Menezes Rodrigues; Telo de Mascarenhas; Ananta Rau Sar Dessai