In his essay "The Lusitanian in Hind”, novelist Aravind Adiga strives to situate the 19th century Goan writer and politician Francisco Luis Gomes (1829-1869) as an 온라인카지노 patriot while decrying how “most 온라인카지노s [have] not heard about Gomes,” which, to Adiga, “speaks more about the narrowness of our present conception of 온라인카지노ness [...].” Yet, through his essay, Adiga further perpetuates the very narrowness he warns against. In trying to resuscitate national and nationalistic interest in Gomes, Adiga explores the possibility of the Goan polymath’s canonicity solely within a prescriptive 온라인카지노ness hemmed in by Brahmanical, masculinist, Anglo-centric, and ethnocentric preconceptions of what it means to be 온라인카지노. In Adiga’s estimation, Gomes can only be made legible to the larger 온라인카지노 imagination if, as a Goan of the Portuguese colonial era, he can be seen as adequately 온라인카지노 based on elitist particularities of caste and other constricted views of proper national and historical belonging.