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Negritude

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Negritude

Literary movement of the 1930s, '40s, and '50s. It began among French-speaking African and Caribbean writers living in Paris as a protest against French colonial rule and the policy of assimilation. Its leading figures—Léopold Senghor of Senegal, Aimé Césaire of Martinique, and Léon Damas (1912–78) of French Guiana—began to examine Western values critically and to reassess African culture. The group believed that the value and dignity of African traditions and peoples must be asserted, that Africans must look to their own heritage for values and traditions, and that writers should use African subject matter and poetic traditions. The movement faded in the early 1960s after its objectives had been achieved in most African countries.



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The papers discuss the history and basic concepts of Negritude, explore the philosophy of Negritude, examine the relationship between Negritude and human rights, discuss the poetics and politics of Negritude, and consider its legacy.
He also displayed an eye for detail as he dialectically transformed, reconstructed and moulded theorising attempts by specific movements such as African-American Black Power and Francophone Africa's negritude.
At independence, President Leopold Sedar Senghor utilized his culture-building program of Negritude to advance modern painting and textile fabrication in his country.
 
 
 
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