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Whose Colonial Project? Angolan Elites and the Colonial Exhibitions of the 1930s: Notes on the Special Magazine Edition of A província de Angola, August 15, 1934 Torin Spangler1 Abstract
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Over the past two decades, we have begun to gain a clearer understanding of the role played by colonial exhibitions in the early years of the Estado Novo (1933-1974).2 Inspired by the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition of Seville and the 1931 International Colonial Exposition of Paris (Vargaftig 2016: 63-98), Portuguese officials such as Armindo Monteiro (Minister of the Colonies, 1931-1935) and Henrique Galvão (director of the exhibitions) set out to produce their own colonial exhibitions, beginning with the 1934 Exposição Colonial Portuguesa (ECP) in Porto. Such exhibitions represented a “meeting of worlds,” meant to glorify the colonial project and show unity between “colonial” and “metropolitan” peoples. “Indigenous” peoples from Africa and Asia were put on display, colonial entrepreneurs exhibited goods, and a host of institutions from both colonies and metropole came armed with statistics and samples to impress visitors to their stands. While new light has been shed on metropolitan perspectives on the exhibitions, voices from the colonies remain difficult to retrieve. This study examines a unique Angolan perspective on the 1934 ECP through the lens of a single publication: the Número extraordinário (NE) of the newspaper A província de Angola, published on the occasion of the exhibition.3 This special magazine edition presents a curious counterpoint to “official” views on the 1934 event. While it is a product of a colonial elite, it is nonetheless written from a decidedly local viewpoint. It is a testament to the supposed achievements of Portuguese colonialism in Angola, but one which emphasizes the settlers themselves and which often reads as a dialogue with metropolitan Portuguese visitors to the ECP, encouraging them to look beyond the surface of the images and information on display in Portugal. When analyzed against the backdrop of early-twentieth century colonial Angolan history—with particular attention to the tensions between Angolan “white autonomist” movements and the nascent Estado Novo—the NE provides a window through which to glimpse Angolan colonists’ involvement in the 1930s exhibitions staged in both Portugal and Angola. Figure 1: Cover of the guide to Angola published to accompany the colony’s section at the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition of Seville: Angola: breve monografia histórica, geográfica e económica elaborada para a Exposição Portuguesa em Sevilha. Luanda: Empresa Gráfica De Angola, 1929. Figure 2: Frontispiece of the publication Angola: breve monografia histórica, geográfica e económica elaborada para a Exposição Portuguesa em Sevilha. Luanda: Empresa Gráfica De Angola, 1929. Figure 3: Image of Western European countries with a combined surface area equivalent to that of Angola (Angola: breve monografia histórica, geográfica e económica elaborada para a Exposição Portuguesa em Sevilha. Luanda: Empresa Gráfica De Angola, 1929) Figure 4: Cover of the special magazine edition of A província de Angola. Número Extraordinário dedicado á Exposição Colonial Portuguêea e em honra da Restauração de Angola em 15 de Agosto de 1648, special issue of A província de Angola ([Luanda] 15 Aug. 1934). Figure 5: “Portugal não é um país pequeno”: image created by Henrique Galvão on the occasion of the Exposição Colonial Portuguesa (1934). Source: Hemeroteca Digital de Lisboa (http://hemerotecadigital.cm-lisboa.pt/EFEMERIDES/exposicaocolonial/Portugalnaoeumpaispequeno.jpg). “Angola não é um país pequeno” In the Angolan case, local involvement in colonial exhibitions began even before the ECP. For the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition of Seville, colonists from Angola created a booklet4 on the colony to accompany the exhibit, images from which can be seen above (Figures 1-3). In 1932, Luanda played host to the Feiras de Amostras de Produtos Portugueses. The Feiras (held first in Luanda and afterwards in Lourenço Marques) were organized by Henrique Galvão, who would then go on to direct the ECP, where he was responsible for the creation of one of the most infamous pieces of Estado Novo propaganda, “Portugal não é um país pequeno” (“Portugal is not a small country”) (Figure 5) (Serra 2016: 50). Galvão’s “map” has come to epitomize the Estado Novo’s obsession with projecting an image of imperial might.5 Few may be aware, however, that similar maps were made in 1929 (Figure 3) and 1934 (Figure 4), showcasing the territorial extent of Portugal’s largest colonial possession, Angola. The 1934 image, “Angola, a maior parcela do Império” (“Angola, the largest portion of the Empire”), is from the cover of the very magazine that is the focus of this article. At first glance, the image seems to be a mere appropriation of the colonialist spirit manifested in “Portugal não é um país pequeno.” Indeed, “A maior parcela” likely dialogues with Galvão’s “map” considering the latter’s appearance in a photograph in the magazine which shows a stand at the ECP belonging to the Empresa Gráfica de Angola (EGA): the parent company of A província de Angola, and also the publisher of the 1929 booklet from the Seville event. What is notable here is not simply the establishment of a direct lineage between the 1929 image and “A maior parcela” in 1934, with a likely intermediation of Galvão’s map; the remarkable fact is that the images’ connection to the EGA means that they were published by a company whose founder and director, Adolfo Pina, was a fervent advocate of Angolan autonomy. Given Pina’s political views, we may never know to what extent the designers of “A maior parcela” intended the image to be an exaltation of empire or a sly retort to Galvão’s message of imperial unity and grandeur. Perhaps it is both; in which case it can be held to be emblematic of the complex relationship between Angolan colonial elites and metropolitan officials during the early 1930s. The 1934 ECP and the earlier Feiras de Amostras were seen by organizers as a means of strengthening economic ties between the colonies and the metropole. These events also came at a time of particular tension in the Angolan capital. Luanda had recently been the site of an uprising of military officers and local political elites against High-Commissioner Filomeno da Câmara (March 20—April 10, 1930), which was followed by a series of measures aimed at dismantling power structures in the colony and reorienting the Angolan economy towards total dependence on Portugal (Pimenta 2005, 2012; Torres 1997). Hostility to metropolitan control over colonial economic and political affairs could not possibly have evaporated by the time of the first colonial exhibitions in Angola and Portugal. However, the existence of publications such as the NE shows that Angolan colonial elites were nonetheless active participants in those events. Angolan companies and organizations, including the EGA, were present at the 1932 Feira de amostras de Luanda and at the 1934 ECP, and entities based in the colony would go on to put together Angola’s first locally organized public exhibitions: the Exposição Provincial de Benguela (1935) and the Exposição-Feira de Angola (1938). This analysis of the NE will look at the themes that most characterize the document and its insertion into the historical context under examination. First, however, we should look at the story of the man whose name appears on the cover of the magazine and understand how his life came to be intertwined with the history of the group Pimenta has termed the “Euro-African nationalists” of Angola (Pimenta 2008). Adolfo Pina and Angola’s White Settler Community What little information can be gleaned about Adolfo Pina from the NE is found in the director’s opening remarks in which he explains the purpose of the special edition, stating:
Pina likens the challenges of producing such a technically audacious publication to those faced by the colonists, whose struggles might be difficult for metropolitan Portuguese to understand. Although he praises the ECP, Pina also implies that the metropole should have greater sympathy for complaints voiced by colonists in the midst of hardship:
Because of his oscillation between praise for the Empire and solidarity with Angola’s settler community, it may be hard to see where Pina’s sympathies lie. To read the subtext in Pina’s words, one must understand more about who he was and what sort of “complaints” he was most likely referring to when discussing the plight of Angolan colonists. Adolfo Pina was born in Porto in either 1889 or 1890,9 and emigrated to Angola in 1910 (Torres 2012: 21). In 1913, he helped to organize the 1º Congresso Provincial de Benguela, where he first expressed his support for Angolan autonomy (Pimenta 2005: 111). Pina’s early activities in Angola are relatively obscure. It is helpful, however, to provide some historical context on early twentieth-century Angola. Pina arrived in the colony at a moment in which power relations between different groups—whites, mestiços and indígenas (blacks)—were changing rapidly.10 Until the late nineteenth century, the Portuguese presence in Angola had been largely restricted to a few coastal settlements such as Luanda and Benguela. The interior of the territory remained controlled by mostly Bantu African peoples and virtually untouched by white settlers, with the notable exception of Sá da Bandeira (Lubango), founded in 1884 (Castelo 2007: 54). Between 1900 and 1930, however, the white settler population increased from 9,000 to 30,000 (Pimenta 2012: 178). While this number remained minuscule in comparison with the black population, estimated at 3.3 million in 1930 (Pimenta 2005: 191), the growth of the settler population was significant enough that the newcomers began to assert themselves as a distinct social group and to form their own press and institutions, while, at the same time, the once highly active “mestiço” press was being pushed aside and suppressed (Pélissier and Wheeler 2009; Corrado 2010). These transformationswent hand-in-hand with a renewed post-Berlin Conference drive towards “effective occupation” and heightened divisions between racial groups under the influence of theories on the “perils” of racial mixing, such as those espoused by Norton de Matos, Governor-General of Angola (1912-1915) and High-Commissioner of Angola (1921-1924) (Castelo 2007: 66-69). This period also saw discussions in metropolitan and colonial circles over the desired nature of the colonial project in Angola. One point of disagreement was whether or not imperial interests would be best served by increasing white settlement of the colonies. Even where officials agreed to promote settlement, they argued over what kind of colonization to encourage: that of skilled immigrants or that of poor laborers, such as the Madeirans who first settled Sá da Bandeira (Castelo 2007). Norton de Matos was an advocate of the latter type of colonization and his views and personal relationship with Angola’s white communities earned him allies, such as Adolfo Pina, who defended the High-Commissioner’s economic policies in 1922 (Fonseca 2014: 154). On the other hand, the High-Commissioner’s stance against the use of forced labor also gained him enemies in the colony and his disastrous financial policies contributed to the strengthening of autonomist movements among settlers during the 1920s (Pimenta 2005: 98-100). Adolfo Pina’s activities in the 1920s were closely tied to the development of the autonomist movements. Pina created the Empresa Gráfica de Angola and its main newspaper, A província de Angola,in 1923. A província focused on issues of “political autonomy in the colony, the problem of indigenous labor, colonization and infrastructure” (Fonseca 2014: 148) and was one of the outlets through which colonists expressed their political demands during the 1920s (Pimenta 2012: 179). In addition to his journalistic activities, Pina was a member of the Freemasons, like many of Angola’s colonial elites.11 In the events surrounding the aforementioned 1930 uprising against High-Commissioner Filomeno da Câmara, Angola’s Freemasons—noted for their autonomist and republican sympathies—came under attack. The uprising came as a result of Câmara’s temporary delegation of authority to his right-hand man, Morais Sarmento, who seized the opportunity to “arrest and deport hundreds of opponents of the new fascist Portuguese regime” (Torres 1997: 10). During the ensuing chaos, Salazar threatened to send a warship to Luanda to enforce Portuguese authority, eliciting calls for independence from some colonists, including Adolfo Pina, who stated:
The outcome of the March 1930 uprising saw Sarmento killed and Filomeno da Câmara recalled to Lisbon. Pina and his fellow autonomists, however, would have no better luck. Following a series of autonomist attacks against colonial authorities in the months from June to October of that year, the Portuguese government deported a number of the rebels and introduced measures to prevent further insubordination (Pimenta 2005: 111-112). Among the laws enacted was the Lei das Transferências (May, 1931), which, in principle, was meant to ensure repayment of Angola’s debts by placing control of its currency reserves in Lisbon’s hands (Ibid.: 113). The law was also a means of protecting Portuguese exports by limiting Angola’s ability to import from other sources. In the wake of this decree, many of Angola’s economic associations issued a letter of complaint to Lisbon, drafted by Adolfo Pina himself (Ibid.). Nonetheless, Lisbon continued to nationalize the Angolan economy and the autonomist movements lost their impetus with the dismantling of local power structures and elimination of the Masonic order (Ibid.: 114). Furthermore, the tightening of press censorship beginning in 1932 meant the gradual elimination of opposition voices from the colonial press, which only those publications willing to align themselves with the new regime were able to avoid (Fonseca 2014: 216). A província de Angola was one such survivor, remaining in print until 1975 and existing to this day through its successor, the Jornal de Angola. Pina may have had to make compromises in order for his newspaper to survive, but he continued to express his opposition views in subtle ways up until his death in 1935. One instance of Pina’s “insubordination” occurred during the 1932 Feira de Amostras. Although the exhibition garnered considerable interest among colonial elites, not all colonists present could have been happy with the premise of the event. The Feira was a show of Lisbon’s strength following the recent centralizing measures; one in which Portuguese products were ironically showcased to prospective buyers from the colony, as if they had a choice in their consumption habits following the government’s recent decrees. Such irony may not have been lost on Adolfo Pina, whose flagship newspaper created a stand at the event under the banner “Por Angola”, eliciting the following comment from fellow Luanda newspaper, Última Hora:
When one realizes that “Pró-Angola” was the name of an autonomist group from the 1920s, the episode emerges as an inside joke among the local press, which, perhaps surprisingly, found its way into a section on positive reviews of the Feira in Henrique Galvão’s official report on the event. Upon Pina’s death three years later, Elmano Cunha e Costa—lawyer, ethnographic photographer and undercover PVDE14 agent in Moçâmedes—wrote to Salazar that although the “New State [had] not arrived to [sic] Angola,” at least Angola was rid of Adolfo Pina, who was “the most dangerous individual that Angola [had] ever seen,” due to his ownership of much of Angola’s free press and his links to the Freemasons (Faria 2013: 105). Angolan researcher Paulo Faria believes that Cunha e Costa’s remarks on Pina were most likely exaggerated (Ibid.). Nevertheless, given Pina’s political position, it is clear that the newspaper director’s words in the NE are a veiled criticism of metropolitan ignorance of colonial realities. The words are couched in a language that glorifies imperial unity on the occasion of the ECP, but, by the end of Pina’s introduction, the writer’s greater sympathy for his fellow settlers is clear. The Angolan Settler in the Número Extraordinário Pina’s colleague and fellow NE contributor, Norberto Gonzaga, published a eulogy for the journalist in the special edition of the Voz do planalto (also owned by Pina) dedicated to the Exposição Provincial de Benguela (EPB) (1935). Gonzaga’s praise for his newspaper’s former director was not particularly controversial, as he limited himself to listing Pina’s qualities as a journalist and businessman (“Exposição Provincial” 1935: 19). However, in exploring Gonzaga’s comments on the EPB, we see parallels with Adolfo Pina’s earlier exaltation of Angolan settlers. Gonzaga writes:
Detectible in Gonzaga’s words is a concern with defending the image of Angola’s white settlers. As Pimenta has pointed out, even white Angolan colonists were the subject of discrimination by metropolitan Portuguese, and as more Portuguese immigrants entered the colony, divisions appeared between settlers born in Angola and those new arrivals, who were seen as having certain privileges (Pimenta 2012: 181-183). This prejudice was also visible in discussions surrounding colonization policies, which were often influenced by deep-rooted theories on the “tropical degeneration” and “cafrealization” (adoption of “indigenous” habits by Europeans) that were thought to affect whites in Africa. These discussions were also marked by criticism of the low social status of most older generations of Portuguese immigrants to Angola (Castelo 2007: 43-124). Thus, when Gonzaga writes of the “rude gente do Planalto” he may also be turning the tables on preconceived notions of the “degeneracy” of the colonists by glorifying the first generations. He goes on to write of Angolan colonists as agents of progress, insinuating that this is something metropolitan Portuguese knew little about (“Exposição Provincial” 1935: 13). Gonzaga also expresses concern over new waves of immigration:
Gonzaga’s glorification of the Angola’s white settler community is also visible in his story “A vida de um raio de sol,” included in the NE. The “ray of sunshine” in question is the unborn child of Natacha Maria, the Portuguese wife of Fritz, a Boer settler who lived near Sá da Bandeira. Fritz is impaled by an elephant’s tusks, but his desolate widow discovers that “as suas entranhas, agora despertas, guardavam a herança do morto”17 (Número extraordinário 1934: 83). Natacha kisses her husband’s corpse, happy in the realization that her future child represents the continuation of her community. Here it is helpful to recall that Sá da Bandeira was one of the first white settlements in the Angolan interior, having been colonized simultaneously in the 1880s by Portuguese settlers from the island of Madeira and by South African Boer trekkers.18 Oddly enough, a young Henrique Galvão spent most of his time in the region in Angola, getting to know both communities; Madeirans and Boers. He described them as “white tribes,” and was particularly depreciative of the Madeirans, whom he believed had suffered a process of “africanization” (Pimenta 2005: 47). Aware of the negative image that individuals such as Galvão held of Angola’s older settler communities, contributors to the NE sought to turn settlements such as Sá da Bandeira into emblems of the successful colonization of Angola. Reference to the town is also made in “Carta de Longe e de Perto,” by José Licínio Rendeiro. The writer, addressing metropolitan readers, complains that “Angola é uma terra caluniada como tantos outros florões do nosso querido Império.”19 He emphasizes the mild climate of the plateaus and lists the modern achievements of the colony: trains, cinemas, and newspapers. Moreover, Rendeiro stresses the “Portugueseness” and “whiteness” of the colony. He writes:
Rendeiro closes with the following:
Writing from Afar “Carta de Longe e de Perto” expresses sentiments shared by Galvão and Monteiro who, in putting together the ECP, hoped to put an end to popular misconceptions regarding the colonies. The notion of writing from “afar,” on the other hand, is one that is present in many articles in the NE and underscores the personal nature of colonists’ concerns over being misunderstood by those back in Portugal. This theme manifests itself in multiple ways. In “Carta ás mulheres de Portugal,” D. Maria Amélia Dias d’Almeida Teixeira writes of the rich social life and quality facilities to be found in Luanda and stresses how pleasantly surprised she was by the quality of life to be had in the colony. Teixeira’s letter is a call to the women of Portugal to follow her example, but, like Rendeiro’s “Carta de Longe,” it is also meant to bridge the knowledge gap between mother country and colony. The appeals from afar in the NE are also often related to a perceived lack of economic support for the colony. Francisco Borja do Nascimento writes that the ECP is an opportunity to reawaken the spirit of discovery among modern Portuguese and open their eyes to the possibilities offered by the colonies. In a seeming reference to the recent strangling of Angola’s economy by harmful policies, Nascimento states:
Nascimento is not the only one to request railroads. Carlos Alves (perhaps the only “non-white” contributor to the NE)23 describes the agricultural potential of the Congo region (current Uíge province) of northwestern Angola and dispels myths about the region’s poor climate and diseases. After listing the area’s numerous positive qualities, however, Alves finishes with an appeal:
What is fascinating about Alves’s article is the dialogue he opens with Armindo Monteiro. Clearly, Alves knew of Monteiro’s 1932 visit to Angola, which coincided with the Feira de amostras, and he was also aware of his region’s representation in the Angolan section of the ECP, using it as an opportunity to press Monteiro on the delivery of real progress to accompany the flash and rhetoric of the exhibition. Alves’s knowledge of the exhibitions is also made clear by the fact that he contributed to writing the “Opúsculo de Propaganda” entitled Uíge, Songo e Bembe: A Circunscrição Civil do Bembe, na Primeira Exposição Colonial Portuguesa, 1934, published under the sponsorship of the Angolan Government’s delegation to the ECP. As a final example of the dialogue between the NE contributors and visitors to the ECP, special attention should be given to Ralph Delgado’s article “A Riqueza Indígena de Angola.” The article contains what initially reads as a somewhat “progressive”—albeit paternalistic—criticism of Portuguese exoticizing and objectification of Angola’s indígenas:
Although Delgado was probably aware of the fact that visitors to the ECP were being exposed to the “lamentable nudity” of Africans who were part of the exhibition’s “living museums”26—hence the article’s inclusion in this special issue—the article seems out of place in a magazine that itself contains pictures of semi-nude African women, such as the one titled “Venus Negras de Angola.”27 In any event, the writer does not dwell on the issue of the objectification of black (mainly female) bodies,28 since his main point regards what he considers to be the “true indigenous wealth of Angola,” of which only the colonists are aware:
The rest of Delgado’s article amounts to a series of statistics on the productivity of Angola’s indigenous workforce. It is a call for investment in healthcare facilities and other infrastructures that will transform the indígenas into even more productive members of colonial society. As such, the article’s message is not so different from that of the advocates of “indigenous” labor in metropolitan policymaking circles. The key difference here—and the main feature that this article shares with others in the NE—is that it stresses, once again, that it is the colonists who know what the colony needs. Whether they emphasize the past exploits of the colonists, the fruits of modern living, or the economic imperatives of the future, the writers of the NE make it clear that their proximity to Angolan affairs gives them a unique right to speak from and for the colony. In retrospect, it is abundantly clear that such elite voices could hardly claim to speak for any but a tiny minority of the colony’s population. Yet the emphasis on local perspectives is clear and omnipresent throughout the publication and stands in marked contrast to the voices heard in metropolitan publications on the ECP. Conclusions More remains to be said on Angolan involvement in the colonial exhibitions of the 1930s. Nevertheless, the examination of this one magazine reveals a side of the colonial exhibitions that is not often visible, bringing to light unique agencies and views—in this case, those of the colonists themselves—which contest one of the exhibitions’ main intended purposes: to demonstrate unity and singularity of thought among imperial citizens and subjects. One might think that colonists would be happy to be represented in the metropole as agents of civilization, thus aligning themselves with the organizers’ ideological aims. Adolfo Pina and the contributors to the NE show us that although pride in the Empire and its “civilizing mission” was certainly a pervasive characteristic of those colonists’ writings on the 1ª Exposição Colonial Portuguesa, they also were greatly concerned about who was speaking for them in the metropole and how they were being perceived. On the eve of the first colonial exhibitions in Angola and Portugal, the tensions between the metropole and certain Angolan colonial elites came to a head following the repression of the autonomist movements, elimination of the free press, dismantling of local power structures, and enactment of harsh economic policies. Despite whatever economic benefits and cultural pride colonists might have derived from the exhibitions, many of them—especially those involved in what once constituted the colony’s opposition press—would not have forgotten their disputes with Lisbon. Thus, even in times of censorship, the contributors to the NE found subtle ways to promote their own agendas between the lines of imperialist rhetoric. They may have genuinely believed in the imperialist ideals being exposed, but they wished to see them translated into real respect and material benefits for themselves, for their fellow colonists, and, in some limited respects, for Angola as a whole. Thinking back to the colorful cover image “A maior parcela do império,” and taking into account Adolfo Pina’s words that the Número extraordinário was “the greatest achievement” thus far of Angola’s printing industry, one can see that the magazine was an outlet for expressing pride in more than just the colonial project on display at the ECP. It was about articulating a particular type of local identity and making the colonists’ voice heard, both in Angola and in the metropole.
References Primary Sources: Angola: breve monografia histórica, geográfica e económica elaborada para a Exposição Portuguesa em Sevilha (1929). Luanda: Empresa Gráfica De Angola. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano VIII, nº 83. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Maio de 1932. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano VIII, nº 84. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Junho de 1932. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano VIII, nº 85. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Julho de 1932. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano VIII, nº 86. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Agosto/Setembro de 1932. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano VIII, nº 85. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Julho de 1932. Boletim Geral Das Colónias. Ano XIV, nº 153. Lisboa: Agência Geral das Colónias, Março de 1938. Coimbra, V. and Leitão, M. (1934) O Império português na 1ª Exposição colonial portuguesa. Album-catálago oficial: documentário histórico, agrícola, industrial e comercial, paisagens, monumentos e costumes. Porto: Agência Geral das Colónias. Exposição Provincial de Benguela e Feira de Amostras no Huambo. Nova Lisboa: Voz do Planalto, 1935. Feira de Amostras de Produtos Portugueses em Angola e Moçambique. Catálogo. Lisbon: Ministério das Colónias, 1932. Galvão, H. (1933) As feiras de amostras coloniais 1932, relatório e contas. Lisbon: Ministério das Colónias. Martins, J. R., Afonso, J. and Alves, C. (1934) Uíge, Songo e Bembe: A Circunscrição Civil do Bembe na Primeira Exposição Colonial Portuguesa, 1934: Opúsculo de Propaganda. Luanda: Imprensa Nacional. Número Extraordinário dedicado á Exposição Colonial Portuguesa e em honra da Restauração de Angola em 15 de Agosto de 1648, special issue of A província de Angola [Luanda] 15 Aug. 1934. Secondary Sources: Acciaiuoli, M. (1998) Exposições do Estado Novo, 1934-1940. Lisbon: Novo Horizonte. Cairo, H. (2006) [2017] “‘Portugal is not a small country’: Maps and Propaganda in the Salazar Regime”. Geopolitics 11 (3) 367–95. Castelo, C. (2007) Passagens para África: O Povoamento de Angola e Moçambique com Naturais da Metrópole (1920-1974). Porto: Afrontamento. Corrado, J. (2010) [2017] “The Fall of a Creole Elite? Angola at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: The Decline of the Euro-African Urban Community”. Luso-Brazilian Review 47 (2) 121-49. Faria, P. C. J. (2013) The Post-war Angola: Public Sphere, Political Regime and Democracy. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars. Fonseca, I. (2014) [2017] A Imprensa e o Império na África Portuguesa, 1842-1974. Diss. Universidade De Lisboa. Hohlfeldt, A. and Carvalho, C. (2012) “A imprensa angolana no âmbito da história da imprensa colonial de expressão portuguesa”. Intercom – Revista Brasileira de Ciências da Comunicação 35 (2) 85-100. Lopo, J. C. (1962) Para a História da Imprensa de Angola. Luanda: Centro de Informação e Turismo de Angola. Matos, P. F. (2006) As cores do império: representações raciais no império colonial português. Lisbon: Instituto de Ciências Sociais. Melo, D. (2016) [2017]“A censura salazarista e as colónias: um exemplo de abrangência”. Revista de História da Sociedade e da Cultura (16) 475-496. Pélissier, R. and Wheeler, D. (2009) História de Angola. Lisbon: Tinta da China. Pimenta, F. T. (2012) Angola’s Euro-African Nationalism: The United Angolan Front. In E. Morier-Genoud, (org.) Sure Road? Nationalisms in Angola, Guinea-Bissau and Mozambique. Leiden: Brill. Pimenta, F.T. (2008) Nacionalismo Euro-Africano em Angola: uma Nova Lusitânia?. In Comunidades Imaginadas: Nação e Nacionalismos em África. Coimbra: University Press. Pimenta, F.T. (2005) Brancos de Angola: Autonomismo e Nacionalismo (1900-1961). Coimbra: Minerva Coimbra. Pinto, A. O. (2013) Representações literárias coloniais de Angola, dos angolanos e das suas culturas, 1924-1939. Lisbon: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian/FCT. Pomar, A. (2013) [2017] Luanda: Exhibition-Fair Angola 1938. Buala. Rosas, F. (2012). Salazar e o Poder: A Arte de Saber Durar. Lisbon: Tinta da China. Serra, F. (2016) [2017] Visões do Império: a 1ª Exposição Colonial Portuguesa de 1934 e alguns dos seus álbuns. In Revista Brasileira de História da Mídia (RBHM) 5 (1). Torres, A. (1997) [2017] Angola: conflitos políticos e sistema social (1928-1930). Estudos afro-asiáticos 32: 163-183. Torres, S. (2012) Guerra colonial na revista Notícia: A cobertura jornalística do conflito ultramarino português em Angola. Thesis. Universidade Nova de Lisboa. Vargaftig, N. (2016) Des Empires en Carton: les expositions coloniales au Portugal et en Italie (1918-1940). Madrid: Casa de Velázquez. Vicente, F. L. (2013) [2017] ‘Rosita’ e o império como objecto de desejo. Buala. Zilhão, P. (2006) [2017] Henrique Galvão: prática política e literatura colonial (1926-36). Thesis. Universidade de São Paulo.
Notes 1 PhD Student, Department of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies, Brown University (Providence, RI, U.S.A.); E-Mail: [email protected]
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