João Pedro Vale +
Nuno Alexandre Ferreira
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Those Who Make The Revolution Halfway Only Dig Their Own Graves, 2019 Impasse. Reading-performance. Variable duration.
This reading/performance aims to restore dissident memories of the integration and assimilation process to their rightful place, which according to Luso-descendent and sociologist Albano Cordeiro led to the Portuguese community into becoming ‘an invisible community which wiped its own memory'. The project takes as its starting point the letter published in the French daily, Le Monde, on 9 January, 2018, by Victor Pereira and Hugo dos Santos, which articulates its opposition to the manipulation of the history and memory of Portuguese immigration. This letter criticized the fact that the Portuguese emigration was being presented as an example of good integration as opposed to the allegedly bad example of immigrants from the Maghreb or the ones recently arrived. Accordingly, individual stories are explored such as that of Lorette de Jesus Fonseca, a Portuguese immigrant who at the end of the 1960s was a community activist and leader of the protest movement fighting the demolition of the slums of Massy, a suburb south of Paris. The Ducky Boys, a pro-violence multiracial group founded in 1983 by the Portuguese João Cordeiro to combat the xenophobic and racist attacks on immigrant communities committed by skinhead gangs. Mário Cesariny, a Portuguese homosexual writer, who in 1964 was jailed in Fresnes for indecent assault, and also Jerôme Rodrigues, a Luso-descendent and member of the Gilets Jaunes, famous for the rubber bullet which left him blind in one eye during one of the movement's many operations.
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