Cahier d’un retour au pays natal (Fragment)
ma négritude n’est pas une pierre, sa surdité ruée
contre la clameur du jour
ma négritude n’est pas une taie d’eau morte sur
l’oeil mort de la terre
ma négritude n’est ni une tour ni une cathédrale
elle plonge dans la chair rouge du sol
elle plonge dans la chair ardente du ciel
elle troue l’accablement opaque de sa droite
patience.
Glossary
|
WORD
|
DEFINITION
|
POSSIBLE SYNONYMS
|
|---|---|---|
| ardente (adj.) | on fire | burning, fiery, blazing, sweltering, scorching |
| au (prep. + art.) | approaching or reaching a particular condition | to the, of the |
| cahier (n.) | a bound book of paper for writing notes and ideas; a word or phrase used to describe a thing or express a concept, especially in a particular kind of language | notebook, journal, terms, conditions, stipulations, provisos, particulars |
| cathédrale (n.) | the principal church of a diocese, with which the bishop is officially associated | cathedral |
| chair (n.) | soft substance consisting of muscle and fat that is found between the skin and bones of an animal or a human | flesh, meat, sinews |
| ciel (n.) | the region of the atmosphere and outer space seen from the earth | sky, upper atmosphere, blue yonder, heavens |
| clameur (n.) | a loud and confused noise, especially that of people shouting vehemently | clamor, racket, uproar, roaring, racket |
| contre (prep.) | in opposition to | against, resistant to, contrary to |
| d’eau (prep. + n.) | part of or related to the transparent liquid that is the basic fluid of living organisms | of water |
| d’un (prep. + indef. art.) | expressing the relationship between a particular part and a whole | of a |
| dans (prep.) | describes the physical state of being surrounded by something else | into, within |
| de (prep.) | expressing the relationship between a part and a whole | of |
| droite (adj.) | extending or moving in one direction only; positioned so as to be level, upright, or symmetrical | straight, direct, straightforward, honest, unwavering, unswerving, level |
| du (prep. + art.) | expressing the relationship between a part and a whole | of the |
| elle (pron.) | third person pronoun used to refer to a thing previously mentioned or easily identified | it |
| fragment (n.) | isolated or incomplete part of something | fragment, excerpt |
| jour (n.) | period of twenty-four hours of time, measured from one midnight to the next, corresponding to a rotation of the earth on its axis | day, twenty-four hours |
| l’accablement (n.) | a state of low spirits caused by loss of hope or courage | dejection, despondency, discouragement, desolation, disheartenment |
| l’oeil (n.) | each of a pair of globular organs in the head through which people and vertebrate animals see | the eye |
| la (art.) | person or thing already mentioned | the |
| ma (pron.) | associated with the speaker | my |
| mort / morte (adj.) | no longer alive | dead, deceased, lifeless, departed, stagnant, still |
| n’est ni (v. + conj.) | not the one nor the other of two people or things; not either as determiner | is neither |
| n’est pas (v.) | third person singular of verb to be in the negative form | is not, isn’t |
| natal (adj.) | associated with a place by birth | native, original, first, of birth |
| négritude (n.) | the quality or fact of being of black African origin; affirmation and consciousness of the value of black or African culture, heritage, and identity | negritude |
| ni (conj.) | not either as determiner | neither, nor |
| opaque (adj.) | not able to be seen through | opaque, cloudy, murky, hazy, gloomy, foggy, nontransparent |
| patience (n.) | capacity to accept or tolerate delay, trouble, or suffering without getting angry or upset | patience, persistence, perseverance, endurance, tenacity, staying power |
| pays (n.) | a nation with its own government, occupying a particular territory | country, homeland, native land, nation |
| pierre (n.) | hard, solid, nonmetallic mineral matter | stone, rock, boulder, pebble |
| plonge (v.) | from the verb plonger, meaning “to submerge one’s entirety into some other substance” | plunges, dips, dives, immerses itself, submerges itself |
| retour (n.) | the act of coming or going back to a person, place, or state of being | return, going back, homecoming, restoration, recovery, repossession |
| rouge (adj.) | one of the three primary colors | red, crimson |
| ruée (adj.) | from the verb ruer, meaning “to move with urgent haste” | rushed, hurled, hurtled, dashed, bolted, hastened |
| sa (adj.) | associated with or belonging to a thing previously mentioned | its |
| sol (n.) | the star at the center of our galaxy that creates light and warmth | sun |
| sur (prep.) | physically in contact with and supported by | on |
| surdité (n.) | the complete lack or impairment of the ability to hear | deafness |
| taie (n.) | a particular place or point not able to be seen through; an encasement | opaque spot, nontransparent, filmy spot, hazy spot, case, slip |
| terre (n.) | the upper layer of earth in which plants grow; it typically consists of a mixture of organic remains, clay, and rock particles | earth, land, shore, ground, terrain |
| tour (n.) | a tall narrow building, often part of a church or castle | tower, steeple, turret, belfry |
| troue (v.) | from the verb trouer, meaning “to make a hole in” | pierces, breaks through, penetrates |
| une (indef. art.) | used when referring to a specific thing | a, an, one |
Bio
Aimé Césaire was a poet, author, and politician born in Martinique, an island in the Caribbean. Césaire is considered the father of an ideological and literary movement called Négritude. Developed by French-speaking black intellectuals, writers, and politicians who were living in France during the 1930s, the Négritude movement found solidarity in a common black identity and rejected French colonial racism. Throughout his life Césaire wrote about Caribbean life and culture, always critical of French cultural dominance and colonization.
Background
I. About Négritude
Négritude is a cultural movement launched in 1930s Paris by French-speaking black graduate students from France’s colonies in Africa and the Caribbean territories. These black intellectuals converged around issues of race identity and black internationalist initiatives to combat French imperialism. They found solidarity in their common ideal of affirming pride in their shared black identity and African heritage, and reclaiming African self-determination, self–reliance, and self–respect. The Négritude movement signaled an awakening of race consciousness for blacks in Africa and the African Diaspora. This new race consciousness, rooted in a (re)discovery of the authentic self, sparked a collective condemnation of Western domination, anti-black racism, enslavement, and colonization of black people. It sought to dispel denigrating myths and stereotypes linked to black people, by acknowledging their culture, history, and achievements, as well as reclaiming their contributions to the world and restoring their rightful place within the global community.
II. Roots of Négritude
The movement is deeply rooted in Pan-African congresses, exhibitions, organizations, and publications produced to challenge the theory of race hierarchy and black inferiority developed by philosophers such as Friedrich Hegel and Joseph de Gobineau. Diverse thinkers influenced this rehabilitation process, including anthropologists Leo Frobenius and Maurice Delafosse, who wrote on Africa; colonial administrator René Maran, who penned the seminal ethnographic novel Batouala: Véritable roman négre, an eyewitness account of abuses and injustices within the French colonial system; André Breton, the father of Surrealism; French romantics Arthur Rimbaud and Charles Baudelaire; Haitian Jean-Price Mars, who developed the concept of Indigenism; Haitian anthropologist Anténor Firmin and Cuban Nicolás Guillén, who promoted Negrismo.
Of major significance are the Harlem Renaissance intellectuals who fled to France to escape racism and segregation in the United States. Prominent among them were Langston Hughes, James Weldon Johnson, Richard Wright, and Claude McKay. McKay, who bemoaned divisions of blacks, was acclaimed by Senegalese poet and politician Léopold Sédar Senghor as the spiritual founder of Négritude values. Senghor argued that “far from seeing in one’s blackness inferiority, one accepts it; one lays claim to it with pride; one cultivates it lovingly.” Pan-Africanist leader Marcus Garvey similarly implored his peers: “Negroes, teach your children that they are direct descendants of the greatest and proudest race who ever peopled the earth.”
III. About Free Verse
Free verse is a literary device that can be defined as poetry that is free from limitations of regular meter or rhythm and does not rhyme with fixed forms. Such poems are without rhythms and rhyme schemes; do not follow regular rhyme scheme rules and still provide artistic expression. In this way, the poet can give his own shape to a poem how he/she desires. However, it still allows poets to use alliteration, rhyme, cadences or rhythms to get the effects that they consider are suitable for the piece.