(Trans)atlantic routes in colonial time African poetry: the case of Noémia de Sousa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22409/abriluff.v4i7.29737Keywords:
Mozambican poetry, Noémia de Sousa, anti-colonial litera¬ture, race, genderAbstract
From the mid-twentieth century on, African authors mark their poetry with strong libertarian tones. Their poems can be interpreted as a discourse of identity affirmation that played an important role in anti-colonial struggle. Among these authors, the Mozambican Noemia de Sousa took an important part, and in her poetry we can read a dialogue with intellectuals and artists linked, directly or indirectly, with the struggles of American black movement for civil rights. This article seeks to interpret the dialogue established by Noemia e Sousa, in her poetry, with the construction of a ‘black identity’ discourse, especially in the consolidation of black movements in West and in the growth of an anti-colonial consciousness in African countries. By reading some Noémia de Sousa poems, we intend to investigate the routes traced by such discourses, also considering the gender issues involved in the poet’s work.
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