dezembro, 2024

05dezTodo o dia06War, Revolution and ReturnConference(Todo o dia) Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Porto, Via Panorâmica Edgar Cardoso — 4150-564 PortoTipologia do Evento:Conference

Detalhe do cartaz do congresso “Guerra, Revolução e Retorno: 50 anos depois, a memória de um Portugal europeu, democrático - e descolonizado?”. Inclui parte de uma fotografia do hastear da bandeira da Guiné-Bissau após a retirada da bandeira portuguesa em Canjadude, no Nordeste da Guiné-Bissau.

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Detalhes do Evento

Conference that aims to debate the experience, representation and remembrance of violence, emerging both from the Portuguese colonial past and the decolonisation process.

 

War, Revolution and Return:
50 years later, the memory of a European, democratic – and decolonised? – Portugal

 

The fiftieth anniversary of the last democratic transitions in Western Europe (Portugal, Spain and Greece) comes at a present time characterised by an unprecedented, at least for many decades, anti-democratic wave and by the systematic challenge of some of the social, political and economic assumptions that characterised democracy since the end of the World War II amongst which were the effective recognition of the right to self-determination and the political and moral demand for decolonisation. The public discussion, with an inevitable political dimension, which presently surrounds the significance of the 25 April 1974, attests that the passage of time alone does not translate into a consensual interpretation of historical change. On the other hand, it emphasises how relevant a rigorous academic debate is, supported by broader historiographical research and critical analysis.

Such debate and research are the more urgent, considering that simplistic narratives are still dominating and influencing the present-day political discussion as we commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the Carnation Revolution. Such narratives have been incapable of a more profound and long-term analysis of what were, are, and will remain in the future, the significant transformations unleashed by the military movement put forward by the Movement of the Armed Forces (MFA) in 1974. By 2024, much of the public debate remains focused on commemorative or depreciative arguments, ignoring much of how today’s democratic Portugal was and is shaped by the violence of what has been described as a different (“lusotropical”) colonisation; the violence of thirteen years of Colonial War, with its profound consequences; a biennium (1974-1976) of unprecedented transformations in the Portuguese contemporary history (social, political and economic revolution, and the end of colonial rule); a complex decolonisation, generating new nations and returns; the effective end of five centuries of imperial history; the return of thousands of settlers and veterans, and their processes of social and economic (re)integration; and, finally the individual, collective and political memory – a disputed memory of April, the Estado Novo regime [New State], colonialism and the democratic anti-fascist resistance.

 

 

 

Call for papers

 

Starting from the need to reflect on the uses of the past, this conference aims to debate the experience, representation and remembrance of violence, emerging both from the Portuguese colonial past and the decolonisation process. Thus, the Colonial War and its crucial role in unleashing the Revolution will be at the centre of the debate by analysing its nature as a disruptive event or a structural continuity and evaluating its interpretation and influence in the former colonial power and former colonies. Finally, the conference intends to discuss the place of the Carnation Revolution in these histories, not only as the catalyser of change but also as the direct consequence of colonial violence and as the foundation of a post-colonial democratic society in permanent tension with its past.

Therefore, we welcome papers in the scope of this conference in line with one or more of the following topics:

– The Portuguese late colonialism of the 1960s and 1970s, the swan song of the “Civilizing Mission”: economic transformation and “conquering” the population;
– Violence as a legacy: the enduring impact of colonial violence in the Por-tuguese and African political developments, during and after the Revolu-tion and self-determination;
– The relationship between the Colonial War, the end of the Estado Novo and the Carnation Revolution;
– 25 April 1974, from Africa to Carmo: the prominence of Africa and coloni-al past in Portuguese affairs;
– Colonial legacies and memories for the democratic posterity: veterans, re-turnees. Social, economic and political (re)integration in a revolutionary context;
– Three parallel dimensions of memory: memory of the War, memory of the Revolution, and memory of decolonisation and self-determination;
– The political and historical narratives of the Portuguese democratic re-gime, namely regarding colonialism, the end of the empire and the end of the Estado Novo;
– The end of empire and Europe: Portuguese European integration and new national identities;
– Portugal viewed from Africa: the former colonies’ perspective;
– The relationship with the independent countries: colonial legacy in Por-tugal and Africa;

 

Paper submission and presentations:

The paper proposals (in Portuguese, English or Spanish) should be submitted by email to congressohistoriaflup@gmail.com with a title, an abstract (350 words max.) and a short biography by 6 October 2024.

Presentations should be done in person. There will be no presentations online.

Registration fees will not be charged.

 

>> Download the call for papers (PT / ES / EN, PDF) <<

 

 

Organising Committee:

 

Ana Sofia Ferreira (FLUP & IS/FLUP), Bruno Madeira (UM & CITCEM), Carlos Martins (EUI), Manuel Loff (FLUP & IHC — NOVA FCSH & IN2PAST), Sérgio Neto (FLUP & CITCEM), Sílvia Correia (FLUP & IS/FLUP)

 

Cartaz do congresso “Guerra, Revolução e Retorno: 50 anos depois, a memória de um Portugal europeu, democrático - e descolonizado?”. 5 e 6 de Dezembro de 2024, na Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto. O cartaz inclui uma fotografia do hastear da bandeira da Guiné-Bissau após a retirada da bandeira portuguesa em Canjadude, no Nordeste da Guiné-Bissau. O público que rodeia o masto é composto por civis, militares negros e brancos e um grupo de jovens com t-shits com um grande retrato Amílcar Cabral nas costas.

Picture: Raising of the Guinea Bissau flag after the lowering of the Portuguese flag in Canjadude, 1974 (Credit: João Carvalho / Wikimedia Commons)

 

Tempo

dezembro 5 (Quinta-feira) - 6 (Sexta-feira)

Localização

Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Porto

Via Panorâmica Edgar Cardoso — 4150-564 Porto

Organizador

Several Institutions

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