CI&DEI - CENTRO DE ESTUDOS EM EDUCAÇÃO E INOVAÇÃO
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- Decolonising Cape Verdean Soul: Resistance, Emancipation and Identity in Corsino Fortes’ PoetryPublication . Rocha Relvas, Susana; Gant, Mark; Kelly, Deirdre; Edwards, Siân; Relvas, Susana RochaAn undeniable point of reference in Cultural Studies1,Stuart Hall (1990, p.222) states that “cultural practices of representation always imply aposition from which one speaks or writes,” which the Jamaican authorrefers to as “positions of enunciation.” The identity issue from which thesubject of enunciation, a victim of colonization, positions itself, isconstrained by the “colonial experience” (1990, p. 224). More than merelyrecovering lost time, the question of identity is related to how we positionourselves in relation to the narratives of the past (1990, p. 223).Only in this way, as Hall suggests, can we understand the traumaticnature of that experience (1990, p. 225). The European presence in Africa,with its power and domination, culturally “expropriated” the “other,”converting it into something marginal and peripheral, imposing upon it aculture that becomes a constitutive element of its identity (1990, p. 233).Here lies the ambivalence of “colonial expropriation,” resulting in adialectic of power and resistance, rejection, and recognition. Creolisationor cultural miscegenation is an example of this, manifesting itself inlanguage and cultural representations. In this sense, the African continentrepresents the great aporia of cultural identity (1990, p. 234). (PDF) “Decolonising Cape Verdean Soul: Resistance, Emancipation and Identity in Corsino Fortes’s Poetry”. Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/400537023_Decolonising_Cape_Verdean_Soul_Resistance_Emancipation_and_Identity_in_Corsino_Fortes's_Poetry [accessed Feb 06 2026].
- Regional, International, and Transatlantic Relations From the Iberian Peninsula to the WorldPublication . Sobral, Filomena Antunes; Ribeiro, Raphael; Ribeiro, Carla Patrícia Silva; Cardoso, Jorge; Amigo, Noa; Sequeira, Carla; Lencart, Joana; Narita, Makiko; Benitez-Baleato, Jesús; López Rodríguez, Alfonso; Tartabini, Veronica; López Forjas, Manuel; Bilecen, Haili; Antunes Sobral, Filomena; Relvas, Susana; Gant, Mark; Edwards, Siân; Kelly, DeirdreThe Iberian Peninsula, home to modern-day Spain and Portugal, serves as a crossroads of regional, international, and transatlantic relations. The peninsula plays a pivotal role in shaping global interactions through its cultural exchanges and geopolitical alliances. This continues to influence global politics, economics, and cultural identity, making the study of Iberia’s relationships crucial to understanding global trends. By examining its connections across Europe, Africa, the Americas, and beyond, researchers may gain insight into how the Iberian Peninsula shapes and is shaped by the world. Regional, International, and Transatlantic Relations From the Iberian Peninsula to the World explores memory politics and historical revisionism, focusing on dictatorships, migrations and exiles, as well as cross border dialogues between communities within the Iberian Peninsula. It examines international relations, centering on the Anglo-Iberian contacts and influences in the political, historical and cultural domains, and on transatlantic studies in North and South America. This book covers topics such as diplomacy, regional development, and nationalism, and is a useful resource for business owners, historians, government officials, policymakers, academicians, researchers, and scientists.
