Anticolonialism in Early Twentieth-Century Portugal: The Ambivalences of Race and Transnationalism in O Negro (1911)
Abstract The short-lived publication O Negro (1911) was a journal created and written by a group of individuals who came mainly from the colonized islands of São Tomé and Príncipe, off the west coast of Africa. This article argues that the publication constituted the first, although ephemeral, Black-owned journal to question the colonial status quo in Lisbon in the twentieth century. By means of a powerful, albeit often ambivalent discourse on exploitation, racial injustice, and economic hardship, O Negro articulated a transnational focus for a reassessment of the colonial relationship in Lusophone territories. It thereby provided the foundation for later attempts struggling for racial justice up to the establishment of the Salazar dictatorship.
Main Author: | Cleminson,Richard |
---|---|
Format: | Digital revista |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Universidade do Porto
2022
|
Online Access: | http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1645-64322022000200218 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Race unmasked: biology and race in the twentieth century
by: Yudell, Michael -
Contra o Vento: Portugal, o Império e a Maré Anticolonial (1945-1960)
by: Curto,Diogo Ramada
Published: (2018) -
Violence begets violence: Anticolonial mobilisation of ressentiment in 19th Century Borneo
by: Böhmer,Karl E
Published: (2019) -
A global player from the South: the Jardín Zoológico de Buenos Aires and the transnational network of zoos in the early twentieth century
by: Hochadel,Oliver
Published: (2022) -
Elementary education in early twentieth-century Jamaica
by: King, Ruby Hope
Published: (Sep. 1989)