Júlio Gonçalves

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Luís Manuel Júlio Frederico Gonçalves (1846 in Nova Goa – 1896), who usually wrote simply as J. Gonçalves, was a Goan writer. Referred to by his contemporaries as the Alexandre Herculano of Goa,[1] Gonçalves had a foundational role in developing Portuguese-language writing in the Portuguese colony of Goa.[2]

A lawyer by training, Gonçalves served in public administration, most significantly as librarian of Panjim's public library.[3]

Portugal's Regeneration saw the reintroduction of the press to Goa, along with expanded Portuguese education, and in its wake, Gonçalves founded and ran the monthly journal from 1864 to 1866. 'It focussed on literary and historical themes, with some incursions into the natural sciences' and carried Gonçalves's 'Bosquejos Literários', literary critical pieces, perhaps the first pieces of modern literary criticism in Goa.[4]

Gonçalves is noted today as a writer of short stories, which he wrote in two series: Contos da Minha Terra and Aventuras de um Simplício. They are reckoned 'some of the very first efforts to European-style literary fiction to a Goan setting' and show the influence of European Romanticism.[5] Two of his works are available in English translation.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ Paul Melo e Castro. Lengthening Shadows. 2 vols. Saligão, India: Goa, 1556, 2016. I p. 9.
  2. ^ Mário Cordeiro, Júlio Gonçalves: De Goa a Lisboa (2013).
  3. ^ Paul Melo e Castro. Lengthening Shadows. 2 vols. Saligão, India: Goa, 1556, 2016. I pp. 9-10.
  4. ^ Paul Melo e Castro. Lengthening Shadows. 2 vols. Saligão, India: Goa, 1556, 2016. I pp. 9-10 (quoting p. 9).
  5. ^ Paul Melo e Castro. Lengthening Shadows. 2 vols. Saligão, India: Goa, 1556, 2016. I p. 10.
  6. ^ Paul Melo e Castro. Lengthening Shadows. 2 vols. Saligão, India: Goa, 1556, 2016. I pp. 55-69.


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