Article Title:Epilogue of empire: East Timor and the Portuguese postcolonial catharsis
Abstract:
The demonstrations of solidarity with East Timor that occurred in Lisbon in September 1999 were the first major political demonstrations since the fall of the dictatorship in 1974. Solidarity with East Timor demonstrated the importance to the Portuguese of emotional and cultural ties to people whom they saw as sharing their language and Catholic religion. These commonalities have a clear colonial history and are now being reconstructed around the idea of Lusophony, which is taken to be the core of a Portuguese postcolonial identity. East Timor, a Portuguese colony that was occupied by Indonesia after the Portuguese revolution of 1974, used diacritical signs such as Portuguese and Catholicism in its nationalist struggle against Indonesia. These signs are the cultural patrimony of a local creole elite and are exaggerated in Portuguese perceptions of East Timor. The colonial and postcolonial ironies of this case of mutual constitution of identity are analyzed.
Keywords: East Timor; Portugal; colonialism and postcolonialism; nationalism; politics of language and religion
DOI: 10.1080/1070289X.2001.9962709
Source:IDENTITIES-GLOBAL STUDIES IN CULTURE AND POWER
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