Results 171 to 180 of about 28,042 (241)
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Negritude and Pan-Africanism: Towards a Paradigm for the Unification of Africa

DU Journal of Humanities, 2021
In their manifest perspectives, Negritude and Pan-Africanism constitute reactionary undertones to misrepresentation of African heritage and the denial of Africans’ capacity to exercise the basic and, by far, the overall essentials of humans, such as ...
O. Adegbindin
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The Negritude Movement: W.E.B Du Bois, Leon Damas, Aime Cesaire, Leopold Senghor, Frantz Fanon, and the evolution of an insurgent idea

Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 2020
Reiland Rabaka’s The Negritude Movement (2015) addressing, in five main sections, the social reality that gave birth to the negritude movement.
J. Sanni
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The Haitian Revolution, the Harlem Renaissance, and Caribbean Négritude

, 2021
In The Haitian Revolution, the Harlem Renaissance, and Caribbean Negritude: Overlapping Discourses of Freedom and Identity, Tammie Jenkins argues that the ideas of freedom and identity cultivated during the Haitian Revolution were reinvigorated in Harlem
Tammie Jenkins
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"The Intuitive Lianas of My Hands": Rebuilding Negritude as Embodied Ecopoetics

Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism
:Frantz Fanon famously reacted to Jean-Paul Sartre's appropriation of Negritude with the assertion that he would rebuild it with his hands, working intuitively to regrow Black subjectivity as if in the coiling form of the liana tree. Fanon's reference to
Jane Hiddleston
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Haitian Revolution, the Harlem Renaissance, and Caribbean Négritude

, 2021
In The Haitian Revolution, the Harlem Renaissance, and Caribbean Negritude: Overlapping Discourses of Freedom and Identity, Tammie Jenkins argues that the ideas of freedom and identity cultivated during the Haitian Revolution were reinvigorated in Harlem
Tammie Jenkins
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Resisting Colonialism, Reclaiming Identity: The Role of Negritude and Pan-Africanism

International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences
This article explores Negritude and Pan-Africanism, two pivotal movements that emerged as responses to colonial oppression and the marginalization of African identity.
Dr. Asit Panda
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Black Mythologies: René Ménil, Negritude, and the Critique of Anticolonial Primitivism

Comparative Literature
The negritude movement emerged from the Black intellectual milieu of Paris in the 1930s and became one of the defining anticolonial modes of the postwar years.
Alys Moody
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Marcien Towa et la critique Senghorienne de la négritude : Une contribution à l’idéologie du panafricanisme ?

Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Studia Europaea
Marcien Towa and the Senghorian Critique of Negritude: A Contribution to the Ideology of Pan-Africanism? After the first generation of Pan-Africans formed at the beginning of the 20th century mainly by black Americans and Caribbeans, the second ...
Charles Wilfried Tikena Boutora
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Death and negritude: Bekolo’s Miraculous Weapons

Journal of African Cinemas
In 2018, Jean-Pierre Bekolo’s Miraculous Weapons won the Sembène Ousmane Prize at FESPACO. The film carries the title of a 1946 poetry volume by the ‘father’ of negritude, Aimé Césaire, and it feels very familiar, but also quite distinctive from the rest
Vlad Dima
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Black Orpheus, Fanon and the Negritude Movement

Sartre Studies International
In Rethinking Existentialism, Jonathan Webber examines Fanon's engagement with the Negritude movement, focusing on his discussion in Black Skin, White Masks. A portion of Fanon's text discusses an interpretation of the movement advanced by Sartre in his
K. Romdenh‐Romluc
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