afro-portuguese
Articles tagged with afro-portuguese
Tag Archive
- 27 de Maio de 1977
- activists
- african screens
- art
- arte
- arte contemporânea
- Artes africanas
- association tchiweka de documentation
- atafona
- Atlas da Solidão
- biografia
- black artists
- Black womanhood
- buala
- Câmara Municipal de Lisboa
- capital
- celebration
- Cheryl Dunye
- Chiquita Brands
- city
- colonial unconscious
- colonial war
- Colorism
- congoísmos
- Creole
- crioulo
- Danças africanas
- decolonisation
- decolonising
- decolonization
- descolonization
- erosion
- Exhibition
- Exhibition-Fair Angola 1938
- films
- France
- Frelimo
- geometry
- Goli Guerreiro
- heteronormative
- humanist paradigm
- humanity
- impasse
- indentity
- installation
- Jahmek Contemporary Art
- Jamaica
- jean rouch
- Jogos Sem Fronteiras
- kilimanjaro
- L'Internationale
- Lee-Ann Olwage
- literatura caboverdiana
- luso-afro cinema
- Mão Morta
- Marcelino da Mata
- Marcelo Ridenti
- Marcus Garvey
- Matthias De Groof
- Mayra Andrade
- Meet
- memória
- memory
- micro-política
- Migration and Development
- Moira Millán
- museum
- music industry
- música popular
- mythology
- nástio mosquito
- Nigeria
- Nito Alves
- Oppressions
- Parangolé
- patriarchy
- Paulo Faria
- poem
- poetry
- polémica
- política
- political protests
- port-au-prince
- Portugal
- primatas
- reflecting Achille Mbembe
- Resem Verkron
- restitution of art
- riots
- school
- schools
- Sérgio Afonso
- sex discrimination
- social construct
- Statement
- sudoeste
- Teatro Griot
- todos festival
- violence
- worldwide artists
 The relevance of black participation in Portugal in the most diverse areas - including music - dates back several hundred years, but is rarely articulated in dominant public narratives. It is not, of course, that blacks in Portugal have no voice or are not present in the daily life of the country. It's often about talking without being considered, seeing without being seen, singing without being listened to - at least outside a cultural sphere that tends to be more circumscribed.
				The relevance of black participation in Portugal in the most diverse areas - including music - dates back several hundred years, but is rarely articulated in dominant public narratives. It is not, of course, that blacks in Portugal have no voice or are not present in the daily life of the country. It's often about talking without being considered, seeing without being seen, singing without being listened to - at least outside a cultural sphere that tends to be more circumscribed.		



