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Railways as portals of globalisation: The case of the Portuguese mainland and colonial rail networks (1850–1915)

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Bibliographic Details
Summary:Railway construction in the Portuguese mainland began in the early 1850s and in the Portuguese colonies in the early 1880s. In both cases, railways sought the frontier and to attract transnational flows, motivated by the Saint-Simonian ideology and promise of promoting circulation, cross-border communications, and overall progress. However, these goals could be hampered by the development of the Nation-State and the conflicting agendas European nations had set for their overseas domains in Africa. In this paper, I will analyse the Portuguese mainland and colonial railways as portals of globalization. I will show how the conflict between globalization and nationalism was handled and how global flows fostered by railways were set, despite the opposition of the emerging Nation-States in Portugal and its European and colonial neighbours.
Main Authors:Pereira, Hugo Silveira
Year:2018
Country:Portugal
Document type:article
Access type:open access
Associated institution:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Language:English
Origin:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Description
Summary:Railway construction in the Portuguese mainland began in the early 1850s and in the Portuguese colonies in the early 1880s. In both cases, railways sought the frontier and to attract transnational flows, motivated by the Saint-Simonian ideology and promise of promoting circulation, cross-border communications, and overall progress. However, these goals could be hampered by the development of the Nation-State and the conflicting agendas European nations had set for their overseas domains in Africa. In this paper, I will analyse the Portuguese mainland and colonial railways as portals of globalization. I will show how the conflict between globalization and nationalism was handled and how global flows fostered by railways were set, despite the opposition of the emerging Nation-States in Portugal and its European and colonial neighbours.