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 TRI Continental Film Festival - Dona Paula, Goa, Sep 28 - Oct 2, 2007

http://www.moviesgoa.org/tricontinental/tricon.htm

For public viewing. Registration at  The International Centre Goa.  (Ph: 
+91-832-2452805 to 10)

              Online Media Partner:  http://www.GOANET.org
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The writer has been active on Goa-Research-Net (and, I think, reads
Goanet too). Rochelle's email address is rochellepinto at yahoo.com
Congrats to her! FN

http://www.easternbookcorporation.com/moreinfo.php?txt_searchstring=14482
Between Empires : Print and Politics in Goa
Author: Rochelle Pinto
Year: 2007
ISBN : 9780195690477
[ Price: RS. 645.00, US$ 16.54 ]
        
Main Features: Over the past decade, a number of studies have sought
to rethink the history of literary cultures and linguistic identities
in modern India locating them in the wider context of print
production, constitution of a reading public, and the interplay of
different social groups. Between Empires offers the first systematic
analysis of the relationship between print culture and colonial rule
in Goa.
Rochelle Pinto discusses the development of print culture and its
implications for larger questions of nationalism, modernity, and
colonial politics. Drawing succinctly from available literature on
print, reading publics, and linguistic hierarchies elsewhere in India,
she offers a persuasive account of the possibilities opened by print
media and the manner in which it reordered social, cultural, or
political ties within Goan society.
Through a careful reading of print produced in Portuguese, Konkani,
and Marathi, this book examines the contesting claims about Goa and
the terrain of its politics. It shows how this highly contested public
realm was deeply reflected in the novels, pamphlets, and newspapers
produced by the Catholic elite, Goan migrants to Bombay, and litigants
in the rural districts in the nineteenth and early-twentieth
centuries. Presenting detailed studies of the emergence of various
forms of print, the author discusses how questions of representation,
genre, publicity, and literary history followed different trajectories
among the non-elite and elite writers.
Rich in scholarship and rigorous and wide-ranging in its
argumentation, this work makes an important contribution to current
discussions on the emergence of print spheres in colonial India.
-- 
Frederick Noronha http://fn.goa-india.org Ph 0091-832-2409490
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