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Jeanne Nardal
Jeanne "Jane" Nardal (1900 – 1993) was a French writer, philosopher, teacher, and political commentator from
Martinique. She and her sister,
Paulette Nardal, are considered to have laid the theoretical and philosophical groundwork of the
Négritude movement, a cultural, political, and literary movement, which first emerged in 1930s, Paris and sought to unite Black intellectuals in the current and former
French colonies. The term "Négritude" itself was coined by Martiniquan writer-activist
Aimé Césaire, one of the three individuals formally recognized as the "fathers" of the cultural movement, along with Senegalese poet
Léopold Senghor and French Guianese writer
Léon Damas. It was not until relatively recently, however, that the women involved in the Négritude movement, including Jane and Paulette Nardal, began to receive the recognition they were due.
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