Deconstructing twinned towers: Lisbon's Expo '98 and the occluded geographies of discovery |
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Authors: | Marcus Power James D Sidaway |
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Institution: | 1. University of Bristol, School of Geographical Sciences , Bristol;2. National University of Singapore, Department of Geography , Singapore* |
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Abstract: | This paper develops a critique of Western representations of discovery, centrality and self-identity via a focus on Portugal's Expo '98. Two of the towers of the title were incorporated into the site of Expo '98 (the last universal exposition of the twentieth century), which offered the chance to reiterate the importance of Portugal's imperial discoveries on a global stage and to reaffirm Portuguese national identity in the process. The paper examines how historical and geographical narratives of imperialism and the ‘Portuguese voyages of discovery’ were reworked in Expo '98 to resurrect a national sense of pride in belonging to and pioneering Europe. Critical postcolonial perspectives which break with Eurocentrism are required if the role of other cultures and histories in the Portuguese contribution to the making of modernity is to be appreciated. Such perspectives enable wider reflections about the constitution of the West and the non-West in the making of a multifaceted modernity of which expositions (and monumental towers) are concentrated expressions. Portugal's was the pioneer empire in more ways than one, and it exhibited all the defects as well as all the glories of the age it inaugurated. No Nation of the fifteenth or sixteenth century ever saw more, reported a greater variety of things, or left more of its imprint on the modern world, whose chief characteristic, after all, is mobility. (Diffie and Winius 1996 Diffie, B.W. and Winius, G.D. 1996. Foundations of the Portuguese Empire 1415–1580, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Google Scholar]: 434) |
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Keywords: | Portugal Expo '98 Lisbon discoveries colonial cities postcolonialism Portugal Expo 98 Lisbonne découvertes villes coloniales postcolonialisme Portugal Expo '98 Lisboa descubrimientos ciudades coloniales poscolonialismo |
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