“I have been investigating the Goan presence in East Africa for nearly two decades, and have written three books on the subject as well as headed a major grant-aided project in the UK to record their oral histories.”- Selma Carvalho (Author- Guts, Glory and Empire)
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Team Kitaab is in conversation with her to discuss her latest book, Guts, Glory and Empire (Speaking Tiger, 2026).
Selma Carvalho is the author of three non-fiction books documenting the Goan presence in East Africa. Between 2011 and 2014, she directed a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, UK to record the oral histories of Goans from East Africa, now archived at the British Library. She curated the first ever East African Goan exhibition at the Nehru Centre, London and her work has been used in other exhibitions, such as ‘Documenting South Asian Histories’, Birmingham.
About the Book
A ground-breaking account of Goans who arrived in mid-nineteenth-century Zanzibar as sailors, cooks and clerks, and went on to become one of East Africa’s wealthiest and most influential communities. This is a sweeping human story of identity, ambition and the ambiguous nature of power.
Zanzibar, situated off the coast of East Africa, was for long a junction for monsoon-driven sea routes connecting Africa, Europe and Asia. By the mid-nineteenth century, it had risen to prominence as a busy, cosmopolitan trading post for cloves, ivory and, unfortunately, slaves. It became a beacon for missionaries, explorers, merchants, and a theatre of Europe’s imperial ambitions. It was at this time that Goans, who had long been travellers and traders to the East African coast, began settling in Zanzibar, flourishing under Sultan Barghash bin Said’s reign.
Among the early arrivals were C. R. Souza, D. B. Pereira and Brás Souza, who would all go on to become influential figures—ambitious, benevolent, but ultimately flawed characters. Their engagement with a host of lively per¬sonalities, including British arch-imperialists John Kirk and Gerald Portal, set in motion a compelling challenge of empire’s authority over ordinary lives. Mistaken as ‘half-caste Portuguese’, they were at times favoured by Britain as law-abiding and industrious, and at other times dismissed as natives needing supervision, even as they began to assert tremendous agency over their own individual lives, gaining influence as physicians, musicians and interpreters to the sultan. Aware of their rights as Portuguese citizens, and making intelli¬gent use of the privilege and protection extended to them by the sultanate, they pushed back against Britain’s erosion of their civil liberties.
In Guts, Glory and Empire, a compelling and unprecedented work of history set against the backdrop of Europe’s ascendancy in Africa, Selma Carvalho brings us the story of this remarkable community, and restores South Asian voices to Indian Ocean histories.
