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Negritude
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Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 121–128.
Published: 01 November 2015
...Souleymane Bachir Diagne We need to reassess our reading of Negritude literature. Justice is not done to the literary, philosophical, and political movement founded by Aimé Césaire, Léon-Gontran Damas, and Léopold Sédar Senghor when it is simply considered an essentialist reversal of colonial...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2014) 18 (1 (43)): 138–148.
Published: 01 March 2014
...Christopher Winks This essay explores the enduring relevance and challenges of Caribbean Négritude poetry, with specific emphasis on the work and thought of Aimé Césaire and Léon-Gontran Damas. The decolonizing imperative that speaks through their work retains an agonic immediacy and political...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2019) 23 (2 (2)): 57–71.
Published: 01 July 2019
...Robert Decker This essay argues for the recuperation of the writings of Léonard Sainville, a founding member of Negritude, and the incorporation of his work into the movement’s canon. Sainville was a historian and novelist whose work mitigates Negritude’s undertheorization of the concept of history...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2013) 17 (3 (42)): 125–137.
Published: 01 November 2013
...Emily A. Maguire In 1943, Cuban writer Lydia Cabrera published a Spanish translation of Aimé Césaire's poem Notebook of a Return to the Native Land with illustrations by Cuban artist Wifredo Lam. The translation introduced the concept of Négritude to a Cuban and Spanish-language readership...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2005) 9 (1): 129–133.
Published: 01 March 2005
...T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting Small Axe Incorporated 2005 Erasures and the
Practice of Diaspora Feminism
T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting
hat would it mean though to stake out a ‘silenced’ genealogy of Négritude
through the transnational intellectual circuits of African...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2008) 12 (3 (27)): 128–141.
Published: 01 October 2008
... in the
1930s and that my approach was more appropriate than it appeared at the time. After all,
since Césaire was a black poet, his cultural context was supposed to be African. This was what
the existing writing in and around the Negritude movement told us, and the enthusiasm for
Jahn’s neo-Africanist...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 86–90.
Published: 01 November 2015
... to Césaire's poetic legacy, his theory of Negritude, his relationship to Marxism, and his intellectual partnership with his wife, Suzanne Césaire. What emerges is a sense of Césaire's legacy as a living legacy, firmly rooted in a specific historical context but revealing different facets of its structure...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2022) 26 (2 (68)): 93–99.
Published: 01 July 2022
... with re-centering Blacknesss in AfroLatinidad in response to the depoliticized usage of this identity. Through a focus on diaspora, movement, and the embodied fact of Blackness , the author argues that when thinking about negro (Black) and negritud (Blackness) from a transnational Spanish Caribbean...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (3 (66)): 199–209.
Published: 01 November 2021
... , reprenant à leur compte le corpus de la négritude, met en avant, en son sein, une communauté de vue sur l’Afrique. Partant de ce constat et pour illustrer les changements intervenus, en Haïti, dans les représentations de l’Afrique, cet cet essai critique de There Is No More Haiti: Between Life and Death...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 91–101.
Published: 01 November 2015
...Jennifer M. Wilks This essay positions Negritude thinker Suzanne Césaire (1915–66) as a cultural critic whose “writings of dissent” remain relevant both in the Caribbean of her birth and the Europe of her death. Although far-right politicians have argued for contemporary France's return to its...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2018) 22 (1 (55)): 126–136.
Published: 01 March 2018
...Fred Réno Négritude et créolité ont une dimension politique indéniable. D’abord parce que surgissant à des moments historiques singuliers du développement politique des territoires français de la Caraïbe, elles contestent d’un point de vue culturel, le pouvoir métropolitain. Ensuite parce que ceux...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (1 (64)): 1–14.
Published: 01 March 2021
... the historical influence of Haiti in the work of the poet (as in the pages of Journal of a Homecoming : “Haiti, where Negritude stood up for the first time” 8 ), Aimé Césaire seemed to have reached an intellectual impasse at home. As he writes to Henri Seyrig in January 1944, “First of all thanks for my...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (2 (50)): 1–13.
Published: 01 July 2016
... of the Antillean being with the Antillean way of life. Rather than a return to the cultural artifacts and traditions of a real or imagined African past, as most Negritude writers argued for, Césaire looks forward to a modern way of life that takes into account all the elements that make up Antillean identity. She...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2008) 12 (3 (27)): 119–123.
Published: 01 October 2008
... the meetings at the home of Madame Paulette
Nardal, a committed defender of the Antillean and black personality. He met the Senegalese
Léopold Sédar Senghor and the Guyanese Léon-Gontran Damas, forming the inseparable
trio of Negritude, but above all, in 1939, in what could be called...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2009) 13 (3 (30)): 63–73.
Published: 01 November 2009
... Antilles en quête de racines: Le regard du journal Le figaro sur la négritude et la créolit Antilla, 526 (March 1993): 33.
3 From 1907 to 1945, of the thirty-eight Prix Goncourt awarded, eighteen were given to regionalist authors.
4 Patrick Chamoiseau, Texaco (Paris: Gallimard, 1992).
5 Reported...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2008) 12 (3 (27)): 175–178.
Published: 01 October 2008
... Festival in 2002 for his body of work and his
documentary Courage de femme. In March 2007, Le Président a-t-il le sida? won the Prix Paul
Robeson at the Ouagadougou Film and Television Festival in Burkina Faso.
A. James Arnold, since publication of his Modernism and Negritude: The Poetry and Poet...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (3 (63)): 1–15.
Published: 01 November 2020
... continues, “When Negros called themselves Negros, wrote in Negro, in short, boasted a literature that was epidermi-cally black, stylistically black, semantically black, and all that jazz, Garnier basked in the most perfect bliss.” 33 Garnier’s engagement with what we recognize as Negritude participates...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 142–150.
Published: 01 July 2021
...? NM: La palabra negritud justamente nació en el cuerpo del Cuaderno de retorno al país natal . Fue la primera vez que se usó. Luego, fueron descollantes las obras del guyanés Léon-Gontran Damas y del senegalés Léopold Sédar Senghor. Fue la excepcional investigadora belga, Lilyan Kesteloot—a quien...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 91–108.
Published: 01 July 2021
... that mirrored Caribbean ideologies of black consciousness and Negritude. Meeting to watch Hernández’s play underscores the importance of black culture in bringing these two groups together. María Antonia , which featured an all-black cast and production team, chronicles the life of a young Afro-Cuban woman...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 102–120.
Published: 01 November 2015
... the work of legacy—or transformation—required. In Césaire, Perse, Glissant , the issue is no longer whether Césaire's poetry is appropriately political, that is, whether it advances créolisation or négritude , autonomy or assimilation. Instead, Chamoiseau is interested in how Césaire's poetry fulfills...
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