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Dear GRNetters,Accept wishes for a wonderful New Year.I am delighted to know that Dr Figueiredo's mission of dismissing my work is now completed and we can move on. Unfortunately, I have not had the time to read the fascicles thoroughly and respond to them as most came out while I was under surgery and post-surgery treatments; but now I am well and will be happy to read and reply to some of the challenges. From my quite diagonal browsing of some pages, I see that some of Dr Figueiredo's comments are sound and potentially useful to the knowledge of this subject, as they assemble complementar information; others, not so much; many of them are speculative and judgemental, and some are plain insult -- which I am sure was not meant by the author, whom, to the best of my knowledge, is a gentleman and a highly educated person, albeit not trained in history and in the art, the science and the labor of interpreting sources.I will be more than happy to respond to Dr Figueiredo's specific questions and debate on matters that I may contribute to -- Public Health in 19th century Goa, the politics/medicine nexus, the inner works of Portuguese imperial governance, etc. Even though I occasionally entered into the 17th and 18th centuries (to better understand the health care system of which the royal hospital was part of), and also occasionally into the 20th century (e.g. the biography of Dr Froilano de Melo, for which I used multiple sources including interviewing his now deceased sons Victor and Alfredo), I remain focused on the 19th century and the early 20th. I am certainly no specialist in the 20th century - Goa or otherwise -- and I do not have the embodied knowledge of having lived in Goa; not in any form or manner am I competing for who knows Goa and things Goan better, 20th century or other. My task is way more modest -- approach a particular society (19th century colonial Goa) using the analytical lenses of the social sciences, in dialogue with scholarly literature (the ones I quote in my articles), and focus on one of its institutions, the Medical School, to better understand the workings of empire and the actual complexity of local agency and local lives. To be honest, my early goal, when I started with this project in 1997/8, had been to study colonial medicine with a critical view on the Portuguese empire at wide. But from the moment when at the NYU library I found a collection of Arquivos da Escola Medico-Cirúrgica -- a scientific journal published in Goa by Goan doctors and pharmacists-- Goa was meant to take the lead, and in fact it took not just the lead but the entire task -- I ended up focusing almost exclusively on Goa and left other sites for another time or another life -- actually for other scholars, as I moved on in my research interests and most of my work now is on plantation labor, not on the history of medicine or public health. For those who wonder, here: http://colour.ics.ulisboa.pt/publications/ and here https://cristianabastos.org.I have not worked with Goa for a while; however, there was a book project interrupted which had been sitting for a long time and got refreshed during the pandemic. It counts on a number of stellar young and less young scholars with serious hands-on research. I had the honor of pushing the cart, but the merit is theirs. I invite all of those who can read Portuguese to check it out: Medicina e Império em Goa - do conhecimento das plantas à biopolítica colonial (Lisboa, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais, 2022)
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On Dec 31, 2023, at 1:33 AM, John de Figueiredo <john...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Dear Cristiana,
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On Dec 31, 2023, at 5:10 PM, Roland Francis <roland....@gmail.com> wrote:
Many thanks to John de Figueiredo for his chain of articles on the Escola Medica.
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On Jan 1, 2024, at 7:27 AM, 'Nuno Cardoso da Silva' via Goa-Research-Net <goa-rese...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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To; Dr. Cristiana Bastos
Dear Cristiana,
I guess my latest message to you deserves further elaboration. What I meant to say is this:
1. On the basis of what you wrote it appears that you may not know that in the particular social sub-group and in the particular sub-culture where I grew up in Goa, being a gentleman and insulting anyone, particularly a lady, are incompatible. So I will repeat what I said over and over: Nothing in this series of posts should be construed as personal animosity against you which I have none. I disagree with some of your opinions and interpretations, but I respect you as a researcher, and I am glad I had an opportunity to have this conversation with you about a topic of mutual interest.
2. Before I decide if I am going to have a debate/conversation about a topic with a person, I ask myself three questions: (a) Do I have expertise on this topic?; (b) Do I know this person from her/his publications/presentations?; and (c) Do I respect this person from her/his publications/presentations? If the answer to these three questions is “yes”, I proceed with the debate/conversation. In your case, the answer was “yes” to all three questions. Obviously this is a subjective decision.
2. I do not believe I “teared your work apart”. I repeat what I previously stated. I agree with you on some things, disagree on other things. I documented extensively on issues about which I disagree with you and presented both the data and the reasoning that led to my disagreement. (For example, your statement that graduates of Escola Médica could not teach in their own School, when there is abundant evidence that they could and did it well, and I presented some of that evidence.) I could have easily said that labeling Goan doctors who risked and sacrificed their health and their lives as “Doctors for the Empire” and “colonial doctors” and calling their School a “subaltern center” are insults, but I did not say they are insults because I do not believe you meant those labels to be insults. I think they are based on a conceptual framework that is inapplicable to the events we are discussing and I explained why I think it is inapplicable. Every time I disagreed with you, I explained and documented the reason. For the most part I used the same sources you used.
3. What is my theory? My conceptual framework (I would not call it a theory) is that the events that took place in Goa during the Constitutional Monarchy and the First Republic are a unique phenomenon and cannot be explained in terms of theories borrowed from other authors who attempted to explain the interactions with Europeans in other societies. For lack of a better expression, I called it the “Goan exceptionalism”. What I mean by this and why I said this was also explained in detail in one of my previous posts and I do not believe I need to repeat it here.
4. The issue of training is more complicated. Time and again we have examples of individuals who made major contributions with hardly any training. As far as I know, Charles Boxer never had any formal training in history. Piaget’s training was in zoology, not psychology. Erik Erickson did not have any training more than a high school diploma. Jerome D. Frank argued that the active ingredients of persuasion and healing are the same, whether it is psychotherapy done by psychiatrists or interventions done by shamans. At any rate, you do not know what my training was in social sciences because I never told you. If you feel that my training or lack of training affected my reasoning and conclusions, I would like to know how that happened, and I will do the same to you. Given that our times are precious, my preference, however, is that we stick to the issues rather than discussing each other’s trainings.
Best wishes,
John
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On Jan 1, 2024, at 1:09 PM, Peter de Souza <peterde...@gmail.com> wrote:
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