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Portuguese filmography on Portuguese Orient: scarcity and specificities

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Resumo:The Portuguese filmography on Portuguese Orient during the Estado Novo is scarce, late, and projects a simplified Luso-tropicalist rhetoric, which has been updating the myth of the lost importance of a territory, once vast, which, during the dictatorship, was already small. It imposed itself mostly due to the symbolic value underlying its possession. This article proposes that the film shortage on Portuguese India, Timor, and Macau stems from this symbolic value of the imagined community (and territory), which was projected more by omission than through imagetic representation. However, with the emergence of the Goa question and the start of the colonial war, the Portuguese Orient began to be filmed as a result of a Luso-orientalist discourse which intended, against the evidence, to consolidate the idea of national unity “from Minho to Timor”.
Autores principais:Piçarra, Maria do Carmo
Assunto:cinema de propaganda “Oriente português” filmes coloniais Estado Novo projeção nacional propaganda cinema “Portuguese Orient” colonial films Estado Novo national projection .
Ano:2022
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:unknown
Instituição associada:Universidade de Lisboa
Idioma:português
Origem:Análise Social
Descrição
Resumo:The Portuguese filmography on Portuguese Orient during the Estado Novo is scarce, late, and projects a simplified Luso-tropicalist rhetoric, which has been updating the myth of the lost importance of a territory, once vast, which, during the dictatorship, was already small. It imposed itself mostly due to the symbolic value underlying its possession. This article proposes that the film shortage on Portuguese India, Timor, and Macau stems from this symbolic value of the imagined community (and territory), which was projected more by omission than through imagetic representation. However, with the emergence of the Goa question and the start of the colonial war, the Portuguese Orient began to be filmed as a result of a Luso-orientalist discourse which intended, against the evidence, to consolidate the idea of national unity “from Minho to Timor”.