3. Publicações
|
3.1. Livros
- As duas Sombras do rio, de
João Paulo Borges Coelho. Editorial Caminho, lançamento
a anunciar.
- África Negra, História
e Civilizações. Tomo I, até ao século
XVIII, de Elikia M'Bokolo. Lisboa, Editora Vulgata, 2003.
- A Geração Silenciada
- A Liga Nacional Africana e a Representação do Branco
em Angola na Década de 30, de Eugénia Rodrigues.
Porto Afrontamento, 2003. [11 Euros. afrontamento@mail.telepac.pt].
- A History of Postcolonial Lusophone
Africa, de Patrick Chabal, David Birmingham, Joshua Forrest, Malyn
Newitt, Gerhard Seibert, and Elisa Silva Andrade. Bloomington and
Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 2002. xx + 339 pp. Maps, notes,
bibliography, index. $49.95 (cloth), ISBN 0-253-34187-6; $22.95 (paper),
ISBN 0-253-21565-X.
- Órfãos da Raça.
Europeus entre a fortuna e a desventura no S. Tomé e Príncipe
colonial, de Augusto Nascimento. SãoTomé, Instituto
Camões - Centro Cultural Português, 2002.
- O Sul da Diáspora. Cabo-verdianos
em Plantações de S.Tomé e Príncipe e Moçambique,
de Augusto Nascimento. Praia: Edição da Presidência
da República de Cabo Verde, 2003.
- Contribuição ao
estudo da Génese do Nacionalismo Moderno Angolano (1950-1964):
testemunho e estudo documental, de Edmundo Rocha. Edição
do autor. 366 pgs. [A obra foi lançada em 21.05.03 pelo Professor
Doutor Ilidio do Amaral e Christine Messiant, do CHEA / CNRS, na RDP
África. O livro pode ser adquirido em livraria ou contactando
edmundo.rocha@clix.pt ou
Tlm: 917561398].
- Angola, Datas e Factos (5º
Volume, 1961-1975), de Roberto Correia. Edição do Autor.
Contacto: rob_correia@sapo.pt
ou angola@lgi.com.pt.
- A linguagem escravizada: Língua,
história e poder, de Carboni, Florence & Maestri, Mário.
São Paulo, Expressão e Cultura, 2003.
- É proibido pôr algemas
nas palavras. Carlos Cardoso e a Revolução Moçambicana,
de Paul Fauvet & Marcelo Mosse. Maputo, Ndjira, 2003, 454 pgs.
- Algumas Danças Tradicionais
Da Zona Norte de Moçambique, de Viriato Tamele & João
Armando Vilanculo. Maputo: ARPAC- Instituto de Investigação
Socio-Cultural, 2003 [Incluindo vídeo, cd, e k7 - Projecto
financiado pela Cooperação Suíça].
- Africans in Asia in the Sixteenth
Century, de Charles Boxer (1989). Camões Center Quarterly
Sept./Dec. 4 pp. The Web reference of the short on-line article is
http://users.erols.com/arbs/Africaninasia.htm.
- Stuvoy, Kirsti: War Economy and
the Social Order of Insurgencies. An Analysis of the Internal Structure
of UNITA's War Economy. Arbeitspapier Nr. 3/2002 der Forschungsstelle
Kriege, Rüstung und Entwicklung, Universität Hamburg. Online-Version
(pdf) | Print-Version bestellen http://www.sozialwiss.uni-hamburg.de/publish/Ipw/Akuf
/publ/ap3-02.pdf . |
3.2.1. Artigos de Revista
ou partes de Livro |
- Islam et vie politique en Guinée-Bissau
contemporaine, de G. Gaillard. In : L'Afrique Politique 2002.
- Arquivos, historiografia e igrejas
evangélicas em Moçambique, de E. Morier-Genoud. In:
Estudos Moçambicanos, n.19. Maputo: CEA/UEM, 2002.
- A restituição de 10.000
súbditos ndongo 'roubados' na Angola de meados do século
XVII: uma análise preliminar, de José C. Curto. In:
Isabel C. Henriques, ed. Escravatura e Transformações
Culturais: África- Brasil-Caraíbas. Lisboa: Vulgata,
Colecção "A Rota do Escravo," 2002, pp. 185-208.
- Un Butin Illégitime: Razzias
d'esclaves et relations luso-africaines dans la région des
fleuves Kwanza et Kwango en 1805, de José C. Curto. In : Isabel
C. Henriques and Louis Sala-Molins, eds. Déraison, Esclavage
et Droit: Les fondements idéologiques et juridiques de la traite
négrière et de l'esclavage. Paris: Éditions UNESCO,
2002, pp. 315-327.
- A História da População
de Luanda Durante a Última Etapa do Tráfico Atlântico
de Escravos, 1781-1844, de José C. Curto e Raymond R. Gervais.
In: Studia Africana, 5 (2002), pp. 75-130.
- Exclusão Social e Igrejas
Cristãs Sincréticas em Moçambique, de Gerhard
Seibert. In: Isabel Castro Henriques (ed.), Novas Relações
com África: Que Perspectivas? Actas do III Congresso de Estudos
Africanos no Mundo Ibérico. Lisboa, 11, 12 e 13 de Dezembro
de 2001. Lisboa, Vulgata, 2003, pp. 225-239.
- The Vagaries of Violence and Power
in Post-Colonial Mozambique, de Gerhard Seibert. In: Jon Abbink, Mirjam
de Bruijn, Klaas van Walraven (eds.), Rethinking Resistance: Revolt
and Violence in African History, African Dynamics, vol. 2, pp. 253-276.
Leiden & Boston: Brill 2003.
- São Tomé and Príncipe,
de Gerhard Seibert. In: Africa South of the Sahara 2003, 32nd edition,
pp. 857-874, London: Europa Publications Ltd.
- São Tomé and Principe,
de Gerhard Seibert. In: Paul Tiyambe Zeleza & Dickson Eyoh (eds.),
Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century African History, pp. 473-475, London:
Routledge 2002.
- Democracia e Corrupção.
O caso de São Tomé e Príncipe, de Gerhard Seibert.
In: As Ciências Sociais nos Espaços de Língua
Portuguesa: Balanços e Desafios. Actas VI Congresso Luso-Afro-Brasileiro
de Ciências Sociais. Volume 1, pp. 67-71. Porto: Faculdade de
Letras da Universidade do Porto, 2002. |
3.2.2. Artigos relativos
a África publicados na Portuguese Studies Review
|
- 'As If From a Free Womb': Baptismal
Manumissions in the Conceição Parish, Luanda, 1778-1807,
de José C. Curto. In: Portuguese Studies Review, 10 (2002),
pp. 26-57.
No Vol. 10, No. 2 da revista Portuguese Studies Review (Released January
2003. Subscription Year 2002) podem ser lidos os seguintes artigos
com interesse para os estudos africanos:
- "The Birth of a Mission: The Jesuit Patriarchate in Ethiopia"
(Pp. 1-14), de Andreu Martínez Alòs-Moner, do European
University Institute, Florence, Italy.
Abstract: This paper
looks at the birth of the Catholic Patriarchate of Ethiopia, a "joint-venture"
between the Portuguese crown, the Holy See and the Jesuit order, founded
in the second half of the 16th century. It begins by focusing on the
first years of the Jesuit order at the Portuguese court. This is followed
by an inquiry into the reasons and occasions for the Portuguese Crown's
decision to change its policy towards the Ethiopian monarchy and send
religious missionaries instead of the traditional diplomatic visits.
The author contends that the engagement of the Jesuit fathers in tasks
that before had belonged merely to diplomats was linked to the contemporary
crisis endured by the Estado da India. The Jesuits, with their optimism
and ambitious goals, offered the Crown the prospect of overcoming
its chronic shortage of means and people. The global dominion that
the Lusitan rulers sought could be attained with the help of a religious
order that proposed to do something similar, a global conversion and
reform; a project at the very center of which was placed the mission
to the "Prester John".
- "Prestige Considerations and the Changing Interest of the Portuguese
Crown in Sub-Saharan Atlantic Africa, 1444-1580" (Pp. 15-36),
de Ivana Elbl, do Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Abstract: The article
explores the role of prestige-seeking in the ups and downs of Portuguese
interest in sub-Saharan Africa and in the value the Portuguese Crown
put on cultivating diplomatic relations with the various African state
in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. After decades of stressing
and pursuing relations with Africa, Portugal downgraded and came to
neglect the African diplomatic scene from the late 1510s onward. Interest
then increased again, temporarily, in last quarter of the sixteenth
century. What had declined was not so much the economic importance
of sub-Saharan Africa, but its prestige and propaganda value. The
economic and strategic significance of Portuguese involvement in Africa
remained, but prestige had suffered. The discrepancy between the material
utility and the perceptions of the Portuguese expansion in Africa
raises a number of questions about the array and nature of forces
behind the overseas expansion, and about the role of prestige as socio-political
motivator. The dynamics of the Portuguese valuation of contacts with
Africa demonstrate that in the era of the overseas expansion prestige
was an important power-generating instrument and its acquisition was
a vital objective in itself.
- "The February 1953 Massacre
in São Tomé: Crack in the Salazarist Image of Multiracial
Harmony and Impetus for Nationalist Demands for Independence"
(Pp. 53-80), de Gerhard Seibert, do Centro de Estudos Africanos e
Asiáticos (CEAA), Instituto de Investigação Científica
Tropical (IICT), Lisboa.
Abstract: In February
1953, on the orders of Governor Carlos Gorgulho the colonial police,
supported by white colonists and African contract workers, unleashed
a wave of violence against the native Creoles in São Tomé.
The background of the bloody events was the shortage of labor on the
plantations and fears of the islanders to become forced to work on
the estates. The Creoles had always refused manual field work on the
estates, since they considered it slave labor. From the onset, Gorgulho's
policies aime at resolving the labor problem in the archipelago. The
massacre was his revenge on the Creoles, who, despite all his efforts,
had continuously resisted labor on the estates. It also revealed the
existing racial tensions between white colonists, imported contract
workers, and the Creoles. The article analyses the causes of the massacre,
reconstructs the events and discusses its current perception in both
São Tomé and Portugal.
- "Portugal and the Curse of Riches: Macro Distortions and Underdevelopment
in Colonial Times" (Pp. 101-125), de Steven Kyle, do Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY.
Abstract: This paper
asks how, in economic terms, was being colonized by Portugal "different"
for African countries than was being colonized by France or Britain?
The answer to this question is examined in terms of Portugal's own
lack of economic development. Most important is the fact that Portugal
experienced a massive influx of foreign exchange (gold and revenue
from the spice trade) during a period when other Northern European
countries were undergoing the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution
and the consequent transformations in their economies that this engendered.
Portugal never underwent these changes until the twentieth century,
due at least in part to what is commonly called "Dutch Disease"
in the economics literature, a name for a pattern of problems afflicting
resource rich countries which distorts their development and retards
the growth of productive sectors of the economy. Portuguese colonies
were consequently involved in this syndrome in much the same manner
that outlying provinces of modern-day resource exporting countries
are. The lack of development of Portugal itself can be seen as a powerful
motivation for the pattern of settlement and exploitation of Portuguese
Africa in the twentieth century, in that the large "exports"
of unskilled labor and virtually complete marginalization of African
populations from even menial labor in many instances was both more
extreme than in other parts of Africa and a result of the inability
of Portugal's own undeveloped economy to provide sufficient productive
opportunities by itself.
- A Manilha e o libambo. A Africa e a escravidão de 1500 a
1700, de Alberto da Costa e Silva. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Nova Fronteira,
2002 (recensão de JohnThornton); |
3.3. Cadernos do CEA-ISCTE
|
- As dinâmicas da sociedade
civil em Angola, de Nelson Pestana ("Bonavena"). ISBN
nº 972-8335-09-1 - Publicações do CEA-ISCTE, Occasional
Papers.
- Impactos da ocupação
colonial nas sociedades rurais do sul de Angola, de Elisete Marques
da Silva. ISBN nº 972-8335-08-3 - CEA-ISCTE, Occasional Papers.
Estes cadernos podem ser adquiridos no secretariado
do Centro, contra uma taxa de participação aos custos
de produção, de 2 Eros cada. Contactar Fernanda Antunes
Centro de Estudos Africanos / ISCTE, Av. das Forças Armadas
/ 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal / Tel.:21 790 30 67 / Fax: 21 795 53 61.
E-mail: cea@iscte.pt.
3.4. Teses |
- Possessing the past: Legacies
of violence and reproductive illness in central Mozambique, de
Robert Marlin. Ph.D. dissertation, Rutgers University (New Jersey),
2001.
- Negotiating colonialism: Africans,
the state, and the market in Manica District, Mozambique, 1895-c.
1935, de Eric Allina-Pisano. Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University,
2002.
- São Tomé et Príncipe:
l'amenagement colonial d'un ecosysteme equatorial insulaire, de
Jacques-Dominique Benoist. Université de Rennes 2, Mémoire
de D.E.A d´études romanes, juin 2002 (é uma tese
fotocopiada).
- Memory of Place, the Place of
Memory: Women's Narrations of Late Colonial Lourenço Marques,
Mozambique, de Lloys Frates. Ph.D. diss., University of California,
Los Angeles, 2002.
- A Mixed Pot: History and Identity
in the Ndau Region of Mozambique and Zimbabwe, 1500-1900, de Elizabeth
MacGonagle. Ph.D. diss., Michigan State University, 2002. |