Césaire, Aimé - Seth L. Wolitz (essay date 1969)

Seth L. Wolitz (essay date 1969)

SOURCE: Wolitz, Seth L. “The Hero of Negritude in the Theater of Aimé Césaire.” Kentucky Romance Quarterly 16, no. 3 (1969): 195-208.

[In the following essay, Wolitz examines the didactic function of the hero in Césaire's plays.]

“J'ai marché devant tous, triste et seul dans ma gloire.”

—Alfred de Vigny

The poet-president Léopold Senghor has written many theoretic tracts on Negritude,1 but Aimé Césaire, poet, playwright, Mayor of Fort-de-France, has expounded, for the most part, his vision of Negritude in verse and drama.

… 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 …

(Cahier, p. 71)2

Césaire, like Lorca, began with poetry and turned to theater later in his career. The stage offered a larger audience and a more dynamic...

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