noun
- Plural of negritude; the quality, state, or condition of being Black; Black identity, culture, and heritage, especially as a source of pride and self-affirmation.
- Plural of negritude; the Negritude movement, a mid-20th-century intellectual and artistic movement celebrating African and African diaspora culture and rejecting colonial racism.
Usage: Often capitalized when referring to the historical literary and philosophical movement; Primarily used in academic, cultural, and historical contexts
Usage: Historical and literary context; Associated with writers such as Aimé Césaire and Léopold Senghor
Examples
- The poets of the Negritude movement sought to reclaim and celebrate African cultural heritage.
- Scholars have written extensively about the various negritudes expressed across the African diaspora.
- The concept of negritudes emphasizes pride in Black identity and resistance to colonial oppression.
- Different negritudes emerged in Francophone Africa, the Caribbean, and the United States.
- The literary works explored multiple negritudes and their role in decolonization.
- Negritudes became a powerful force in challenging Eurocentric perspectives in the mid-twentieth century.