FN: Frederick Noronha’s blog

Various themes that interest me… Free Software, Goa, books, developmental issues…

A rich tapestry of history, clothing and passionate prose

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Book Cover:  http://bit.ly/ModaGoa

A stunning collection of photographs and illustrations, interwoven with the stories of people and events that shaped Goa, this book documents, for the very first time, the unique history of Goan costume.

In this, his tribute to Goa, Wendell Rodricks studies the factors that shaped Goa’s distinct garment style. From Buddhist drapes that carried forward the elaborate style of later Hindu costume, to the fine brocade coats of the Muslim Tughlaq rulers; from the Portuguese invaders who had to improvise their traditional Renaissance dress to suit the hot Konkan climate to the Western-style dresses of the newly converted Goan Catholics, Goans are what they are today because of the many peoples and cultures that touched their land. It was inGoa that the first ever Indo-Western garments evolved.

Different faiths, tribes and foreign cultures coloured the Goan clothing heritage, creating a style that is a unique blend of international aesthetic and Indian emotion.

Wendell Rodricks places this history of Goan costume in the spotlight with an archive that has never been researched before. Through illustrations by European travellers, a wealth of photographs by Mark Sequeira and India’s finest fashion photographers, and access to the fine clothing and jewellery of Goans, Wendell Rodricks makes a debut as author to reveal a rich tapestry of history, clothing and passionate prose, taking the reader to the beauty and backwaters of India’s golden state.

As Sathya Saran says, ‘[This book brings together] all the years of being a casual writer of serious articles to a head, putting his discipline and knowledge, and his love of his craft and his region to good use, creating for posterity a document that generations of students and readers can find inspiration from.’

Wendell Rodricks has put the tiny Indian state of Goa firmly on the fashion map. Establishing his own label in 1990, he moved to his ancestral village in Goa in 1993, creating memorable collections each season, inspired by many emotions. Known as India’s guru of minimalism, he gave the country resort wear, minimalism and ecofriendly clothing before the words were coined. He has written for many periodicals and books, has lectured on world costume History for eight years, interned at museums in Lisbon and New York and has been researching the history of Goan costume for eleven years. This is his first book.

Goanet A-C-E!
Arts ~ Culture ~ Entertainment
www.goanet.org

Written by fredericknoronha

January 3, 2012 at 1:35 am

Posted in Goa

Writing, for children…

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Espi Mai is Stuck Again...

Espi Mai is Stuck Again...

THE PRINTED WORD | Frederick Noronha

Anita Pinto’s ‘Tales from Golden Goa’ was something I first came across when my now-teenage daughter Riza needed some reading material. Rather, material to-be-read-to. The fascination with which she lapped up the Goa-based stories was really heart-warming.

Anita Pinto

Anita Pinto

Our own generation grew up with a scarcity of books for children. We would badger mum to pick up the few available at Varsha’s, the bookstall in Panjim then run by the father of Waman and Santosh Bhate who currently tend to it. There was another near the Shakuntala fountain in Mapusa, that mostly disappointed us and said no new books had come in from Orient Longman (or the handful of other national publishers).

There was a greater chance to come across an Enid Blyton, or a Beano or Bunty comic from the UK, or even an Africa-oriented Lance Spearman (aka The Spear) comic.

Now things have changed. A little. Aren, the second child, enjoyed Anita’s writing as much. The writer is releasing her second book of specifically Goa-focussed short stories for children this weekend (Oct 22, Saturday) at 5 pm at the Kala Academy. While looking at that subject, one was wondering how many options children looking for local reading material actually have. Functions like these could be an excuse for taking stock and building links among those focussed on the important job of writing for children.

A quick (and incomplete) rummage through my book collection tells me that a few but determined set of individuals have been writing for children in Goa. Perhaps they do so even if there the channels for distributing more such writing is yet to be effectively built.

For instance there’s Anne de Braganca Cunha (Goan Whoopee, Goan Tales for Children, 1999 and The Greedy Monkey, Mosaic Books, New Delhi); Surekha Panandikar (The Bridge at Borim, National Book Trust, 1999), Odette Mascarenhas (the Alfie Alphonso series), the late Olivinho Gomes (Konkani Folk Tales, NBT, 2007) and ex-Tanzanite (if not mistaken) Dr Susheela S Fonseca (Touched by Love, a novel for youth, 2005).

There have been magazines too, like the Prashanti Talpankar-edited one in Konkani (Rajhauns ani Bhurghim) and the children’s section in BIMB, ‘The Bookworm’ magazine from the children’s-library-and-more initiative of the same name, another by Rinald D’Souza, now a Jesuit priest, and musician-ad guru Alex Braganza’s own mag for youth. I’ve not seen copies of these lately, except for The Bookworm but could be simply out of touch.

On posting a query to Twitter, I got a couple of crucial reminders: Merril Diniz @MerrilD pointed to (my long-time friend) Mario Coelho of Ponda, while Prof Ramrao Wagh @ramraowagh pointed to another old friend, Rajashree Bandodkar-Karapurkar who, as he rightly noted, writes for children and her focus is on popular science.

Last weekend, I ran into Vishnu Wagh, the prominent writer active in the Marathi-Konkani space, theatre and other fields. Among the names he mentioned were Gajanan Jog of Taleigao, Kumud Naik okf the Goa Konkani Akademi, Rajini Bhembre of Curchorem, Milan Talaulikar of Tonca, Prof Prakash Parienkar, Dilip Borkar’s Bimb journal, sections within the Sunaparant and Marathi Gomantak Hello magazine, and Chandrakant Rama Gawas of Keri-Sattari.

There are others too, who while they don’t write exclusive for children, do have some of their writing which could be suitable to young people. For instance, Vinayak Sadashiv Sukhthanker (see his Tales & Tellers of Goa, 1974), Rahul Alvares’ adventures with snakes and his adventures during a sabbatical year after school (‘Free From School’, 1999), Luis S R Vas (Modern Goan Short Stories, 1971). Eulalia Alvares is from Mangalore, whose grand-neice, if I do not get it wrong, bears the same name and similar interests and is based at Margao.

While all this might sound like a long list, the point is (i) writing for children in Goa is still hard to come by (ii) it is written in different languages and scripts, with few translations among these, only dividing the small local market further (iii) some initiatives and writers have stopped or ceased (iv) there isn’t much happening on a consistent basis.

One hopes more could be done to promote this field, badly needed to stimulate the imagination of our kids.

ENDS

The writer can be contacted on fn@goa-india.org or 2409490 or 9822122436. First published in The Gomantak Times, Goa.

Written by fredericknoronha

October 17, 2011 at 1:23 am

Posted in Goa

Veni, Vidi… Goa

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Written by fredericknoronha

October 3, 2011 at 2:56 am

PUBLISHINGNeXT conference in Goa, Sept 2011

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PUBLISHINGNeXT conference in Goa, Sept 2011

Originally uploaded by fredericknoronha.

Discussing social media in Indian publishing. Publishing-Next.com #pubnext Goa, India, Sept 16-17, 2011.

Written by fredericknoronha

September 17, 2011 at 8:44 am

Posted in Goa

PublishingNeXt, conference. Goa Sept 2011

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PublishingNeXt, conference. Goa Sept 2011

Originally uploaded by fredericknoronha.

Selling books at the Publishing-Next.com #pubnext conference, Goa 16-17, 2011… That’s Manoj.

Written by fredericknoronha

September 17, 2011 at 8:08 am

Posted in Goa

PublishingNeXt, conference. Goa Sept 2011

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Written by fredericknoronha

September 17, 2011 at 8:01 am

Posted in Goa

Goa -Old Photos… the diaspora in Africa

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Goa -Old Photos… the diaspora in Africa

Originally uploaded by fredericknoronha.

See some age-old historic photos online at the Goa Old Photos group. http://bit.ly/ieNVmY

Via Flickr:
Dr. Euclid de Souza, vice-president of Goan Overseas Association, Joseph Anthony Zuzarte Murumbi, Foreign Minister, Kenya, Luis de AssisCorreia, Pio Gama Pinto MP Kenya and Rosario Gama Pinto at a Barclays Bank, Nairobi sundowner in 1964. Photo from the collection of Luis Assis Correia.

Written by fredericknoronha

June 2, 2011 at 12:34 am

Posted in Goa

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