<em>Femmes in Négritude</em>: intellectual black silenced

Authors

  • Rosânia Oliveira do Nascimento Universidade Federal do Oeste do Oeste da Bahia

Keywords:

Négritude, black intellectuals, Suzanne Roussi-Césaire, Caribbean.

Abstract

This article analyzes the contributions of black intellectuals within the circle of the Movement Négritude. In this way, we look at the agencies as well as try to understand how the process of silencing of women’s voices, especially the martinique Suzanne Roussi-Césaire, within the movement that became known by the name of the “fathers” of négritude, martinique Aimé Césaire and the senegalese, Léopold Sédar Senghor. Th e article is based on the discussions of the ivorian Tanella Boni (2014) and the north-american, Sharpley-Whitting (2000), is unpublished in Brazil, since the portuguese translations of the texts of négritude and the discussions of the hall of cultural studies, postcolonial and decoloniality, have based only a masculine genealogy.

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Published

2016-07-25

How to Cite

Nascimento, R. O. do. (2016). <em>Femmes in Négritude</em>: intellectual black silenced. ENTRE-LUGAR, 7(13), 10–20. Retrieved from https://ojs.ufgd.edu.br/entre-lugar/article/view/6634

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Section

Articles