Ford-Smith, HonorMiranda, Farrah-Marie2018-07-172018-07-172016Major Paper, Master of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York Universityhttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/34810This paper is about a state of constant movement across the border in an effort to find JIVELANDIA; a subjunctive space where time, memory, characters and actions come together in unruly ways to give us a glimpse into a futurity on the horizon. I argue that practices of memory, play a significant part in processes of decolonization. I enact these practices by narrating the pieces of my family's journey across borders. I also offer a historical sketch of Portuguese colonization of Goa, which is our place of origin. Memory evokes borders. More than a delineation of nation-state politics, borders reflect the psychic and emotional boundaries that constitute our lives. Recognizing this can be highly generative for political and artistic practices. I take up the meaning of these ideas in my critical discussion of contemporary migrant justice movements, arguing for a recognition of the productivity of border thinking. In so doing, I hope to heed Raymond Williams call for an "openness" that "is in fact strengthening"¹. ¹ Williams, R., & Milner, A. (2010). Tenses of imagination: Raymond Williams on science fiction, utopia and dystopia (Vol. 7). Peter Lang. p.110enAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.Jivelandia. Decolonizing Nostalgia In The Goan Catholic DiasporaMajor Paper2018-07-17PerformanceDecolonizationFeminismGoan Diaspora