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Original Articles

Remembering and fictionalizing inhospitable Europe: The experience of Portuguese retornados in Dulce Maria Cardoso’s The Return and Isabela Figueiredo’s Notebook of Colonial Memories

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Pages 729-742 | Published online: 23 Aug 2017
 

Abstract

At a time when issues of migration, both voluntary and forced, are rife, it is vital to further unpack the politics and poetics of hospitality as a complex discourse of inclusion and exclusion, belonging and alienation, welcoming and rejection. Situated within the framework of Derridean thought on hospitality, this article examines Dulce Maria Cardoso’s O Retorno (The return, 2011) and Isabela Figueiredo’s Caderno de Memórias Coloniais (Notebook of colonial memories, 2009) with a focus on the return to the metropolitan centre or Metrópole – actually “repatriation” from former Portuguese African colonies to Portugal – and the subsequent estrangement and negotiation of inhospitality and hostility experienced by Cardoso’s and Figueiredo’s characters. If travel and migration in themselves present an identitary challenge, in the sense that the encounter with the other coincides with the reconfiguration of self, the issues of gender and a forced return “home” add complexity to this challenge. This article makes a case for the intersection of world-systems theory and Portuguese (de)colonization. The identitary intersections and overlaps the retornado characters experience in The Return and Notebook of Colonial Memories are further compounded by the fact that their authors speak from the south within the north, giving voice to the interidentity of the Portuguese as what Sousa Santos has termed “Calibanized Prospero” and “Prosperized Caliban”.

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank both Anastasia Valassopoulos and the anonymous Journal of Postcolonial Writing reviewers for their insightful comments on this article.

Notes

1. The use of the term “colonial war” (or alternatively “overseas war”) acknowledges its political situatedness as the Portuguese official designation for the conflict, since the same was named as “national liberation struggle” or “war for independence” by the liberation movements of the former overseas provinces of Angola, Guinea-Bissau and Mozambique between 1961 and 1974.

3. All translations of the Portuguese originals are mine unless otherwise indicated.

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