Saturday 20 Apr 2024

The Goa question and its erasures - I

There are many Goas in our minds. These many Goas produce many reposes and modes of Goanisings

Fr. Victor Ferrao | MARCH 20, 2019, 03:05 AM IST

Fr. Victor Ferrao

When an event occurs it creates its own ancestry/ history. It means no  event irrupts from nowhere. It occurs in an already existing context. In  some way, every event retroactively creates its past. 

Staying within  this chain of thoughts, we may raise what maybe  called ‘the Goa question’.  

The Goa Question is profoundly semiotic and  carries along with it several shades of meaning, forms of life,  genealogies, lines of politics, pains, traumas and losses.  

It may be  viewed as a master signifier of Jacques Lacan  that has no substantive core but derives its  meaning and relevance from outside itself. 

This means we have to shun aside amputated  meanings, forms of life, genealogies, histories, goanisings and lines  of politics. This leads us to embrace not just linear  view of history and progress but also embrace horizontal factors that   have enabled the  arrows of time that reached actualisations in our  society. 

This epistemic sensitivity opens several vital dimensions that  might remain un-thought and stay under erasure.  

   Maybe Slavoj Zizek drives this point home when he speaks of his  experience in a coffee shop. He says that once he went to a coffee shop  and asked for a coffee without cream. He relates that the waiter told  him that they do not have coffee without  cream but   they can serve him coffee without  milk. We all know that  it is the  same coffee whether one drinks it  as coffee without cream or milk.

But  we think that we construct a way of being coffee (ontology) when we  look for coffee without milk or coffee without  cream. 

If we stretch this analogy of coffee to our ways of thinking   and being Goa and Goans, we may realistically say that the question of  Goa is also construed with several erasures like coffee without cream or  milk. 

Somehow we grant being to our thinking  that may not necessarily capture the reality of Goa. Thus, for instance, the upper caste constructs a Goa to legitimate  the form of  life that maintains its  privileged hegemony and hierarchical location   that to a large extent assigns bare life in different  degrees to other Goans and non-Goans and think that it is the only way  of being Goa and Goans.   

   Goa is also a master signifier in a Lacanian sense and  derives its  meaning and relevance form outside. This semantic ex-centricity of a  master signifier produces politics and can provide us lenses to  understand and respond to politics that bears the  name -Goa in our society. 

We can mark out several such political  movements. All of these movements  rework the  Aristotelian   distinction  between biological existence (zoe) and political life of  speech and action (bios), and between mere life and good life. 

 Movements that we notice in Goa  that claim to have Goa and Goans  to  their heart generate  politics  in the sense of bios and  good life  which Aristotle construes as happy life. 

But each of them does suffer  deficiencies that remain as blind spots to their  adherents and are visible only to the outsiders. 

Hence, the  Goa  Question and its erasures  call our serious attention and scrutiny.   Such an attention promises to open us ways to understand how our wounds   from the past refuse to heal and construct  genealogies  of arrows of times that generate our innocence in several ways. 

Thus,  the histories constructed as Goa Dourada as well as its rival  Goa  Indica   only prolong the wounded past  and forgets  the several  histories/pasts of our people.  

   Opening the form of life that we view as good life does manifest an  uncomfortable fact that we have inherited damaged life.  

But this does  not in any way justify that we continue the damage today.  Hence, we  have to remain open to the evolutionary past of the  land and people that we today recognize as Goa and Goans.  This means  we have to understand the social contract we have with Goa and Goans.   

This awareness of the social contract produces and animates  our  commitment to Goa and Goans. 

The next therapeutic  awareness is:  the realisation that we conceive good life in different  ways which than introduces difference in the way we conceptualize and  prioritize Goa. 

There are many Goas in our minds. These many Goas  produce many reposes and modes of Goanisings.  This  awareness can also reveal us how what often masks as interest of Goa  and Goans  is nothing but self interest of some. 

Thus, opening the  several erasures that mark the Question of Goa, we will be enabled to  seek emancipative ways of goanising and resist de-Goanisation  that masquerades as authentic 

Goanising. 

This resistance to  de-Goanization in all forms cannot acquire single monadic form and will  embrace several forms that challenge de-goanisation  though every  resistance to de-Goanisation may not be free from self interest.  

Hence, more than consensus, we need an ethics of dissensus to discern  authentic forms of Goanising.

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