Agostinho Fernandes (2 July 1932 – 29 June 2015) was a Goan writer and cardiologist who was the author of one of Goa's key post-colonial novels, Bodki (1962), which had attracted significant critical attention.
Fernandes's most famous work is the Portuguese-language novel Bodki (1962). In the words of Everton V. Machado,
The constant clash between modern convictions of the elite raised in a Christian environment and the popular beliefs among the lower social strata of Goa must be re-emphasized within the set of Indo-Portuguese themes, as is very clearly illustrated in the novel Bodki ... In it, a young physician from the capital finds himself confronting the superstitions of the people of a village, especially those who marginalize the bodki, a Hindu widow, considered to be responsible for all the bad happenings that took place there.[2]
Fernandes was involved in journalism in Goa, Angola and Portugal;[3] wrote a number of unpublished plays in Konkani; and the poetry collection Os Meus proprios pedaços.[4] He also wrote the novel Por além do além, published in 2007.[5]
^Everton V. Machado, 'Indo-Portuguese Literature and the Goa of its Writers', in The making of the Luso-Asian world: Intricacies of Engagement, ed. by Laura Jarnagin, Portuguese and Luso-Asian Legacies in Southeast Asia, 1511-2011, 1 (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2011), pp. 229-38.