Skip to content
1981
Volume 9, Issue 2-3
  • ISSN: 1474-2756
  • E-ISSN: 2040-0578

Abstract

This article explores Manoel de Oliveira’s travelogue film Um Filme Falado/A Talking Picture, released in 2003, the year in which Portugal joined the US-led coalition in the Iraq War. Here I discuss the ways in which the film recycles and subverts Portugal’s fifteenth-century maritime expansionist narrative and Sebastianist mythologies of the Crusade, as a means of exposing and criticizing Portugal’s late twentieth-century global alignment with post-9/11 anti-Islamicism. The result of this is a subtle remapping of the conventional West-to-East voyage of discovery in terms that actually underscore the origins of what the sociologist Boaventura de Sousa Santos terms the ‘abyssal lines’ delineating a globalizing North against a globalized South.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1386/ncin.9.2-3.115_1
2012-11-20
2026-04-19

Metrics

Loading full text...

Full text loading...

/content/journals/10.1386/ncin.9.2-3.115_1
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a success
Invalid data
An error occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test