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Global journal of arts, humanities and social sciences
Black is beautiful! Such words from Martin Luther King are much telling about the inner meaning of movements like that of Negritude. Born out of the wings of racism and exclusion, the Negritude movement voiced out the strong need to step out of any form ...
Abib Sène
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Black is beautiful! Such words from Martin Luther King are much telling about the inner meaning of movements like that of Negritude. Born out of the wings of racism and exclusion, the Negritude movement voiced out the strong need to step out of any form ...
Abib Sène
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French Studies
:This article explores how the French rapper Youssoupha appropriates the historical concept of Negritude to develop an intersectional conception of Black cultural identity.
Eric Wistrom
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:This article explores how the French rapper Youssoupha appropriates the historical concept of Negritude to develop an intersectional conception of Black cultural identity.
Eric Wistrom
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American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, 2009
While highlighting the inherent tension between the quest for univer- salization and the unavoidable particularity in philosophical hermeneutics, this essay argues against what it regards as the uncritical characterization of Leopold Sedar Senghor's concept of "negritude" in terms of ethnophilosophy, a derogatory term employed in contemporary African ...
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While highlighting the inherent tension between the quest for univer- salization and the unavoidable particularity in philosophical hermeneutics, this essay argues against what it regards as the uncritical characterization of Leopold Sedar Senghor's concept of "negritude" in terms of ethnophilosophy, a derogatory term employed in contemporary African ...
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2006
Abstract On the Left Bank of the River Seine in the 1930s and 1940s, a powerful theory of racial difference emerged among students and intellectuals immersed in French culture. What distinguished this movement from the many previous theorizations of the African’s racial characteristics was that the proponents of ‘ negritude> ...
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Abstract On the Left Bank of the River Seine in the 1930s and 1940s, a powerful theory of racial difference emerged among students and intellectuals immersed in French culture. What distinguished this movement from the many previous theorizations of the African’s racial characteristics was that the proponents of ‘ negritude> ...
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Faces of Blackness: The Creation of the New Negro and Négritude Movements in Harlem and Paris
, 2020This article explores the cultural and ideological link between the New Negro Movement of Harlem and the Négritude Movement of Paris from 1920s to the 1940s.
Gamby Diagne Camara
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Diogenes, 1962
The rise of numerous African states to independence and participation in international organizations is only a moment—undoubtedly a very powerful moment—in the extraordinary process of historical acceleration which our epoch has both the misfortune and privilege of witnessing. Future historians will very likely determine that the true revolution of the
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The rise of numerous African states to independence and participation in international organizations is only a moment—undoubtedly a very powerful moment—in the extraordinary process of historical acceleration which our epoch has both the misfortune and privilege of witnessing. Future historians will very likely determine that the true revolution of the
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2017
Chapter 3 considers a range of manifestoes and essays that articulate the primitivist project. Anchoring the discussion with Ernst Bloch’s conception of objective and subjective “nonsynchronicity,” it goes on to look at the ways in which artists appealed to the remnants of “primitive” societies when forming anticapitalist aesthetic programs that aimed ...
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Chapter 3 considers a range of manifestoes and essays that articulate the primitivist project. Anchoring the discussion with Ernst Bloch’s conception of objective and subjective “nonsynchronicity,” it goes on to look at the ways in which artists appealed to the remnants of “primitive” societies when forming anticapitalist aesthetic programs that aimed ...
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Transition, 1964
JEAN-PAUL SARTRE was the first to give Negritude an extended critical exposition. It was his famous essay, "Black Orpheus", which he wrote as a preface to Senghor's anthology of negro poets of French expression that defined and consecrated the term, which has since entered into the popular French dictionary, Larousse, and may one day be accepted by the
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JEAN-PAUL SARTRE was the first to give Negritude an extended critical exposition. It was his famous essay, "Black Orpheus", which he wrote as a preface to Senghor's anthology of negro poets of French expression that defined and consecrated the term, which has since entered into the popular French dictionary, Larousse, and may one day be accepted by the
openaire +1 more source

