Threads of Ifriqiya
What shocked Europe about Nazism, Aimé Césaire argued in 1950, was the fact that methods long reserved for colonized peoples had finally been turned on white Europeans themselves. In this episode, we open a small trilogy on colonialism and its enduring legacy with one of the most explosive anti-colonial texts ever written: Discours sur le colonialisme, and a companion speech, Discours sur la Négritude, delivered nearly four decades later. Césaire was Martinican by birth — from a Caribbean island still legally part of France today. But his intellectual journey was inseparable from Africa's. So we bend our rules a bit and include him here. Because he cofounded the Negritude movement, gave a generation of colonized Africans a language for what had been done to them, and spent decades dismantling the myth that colonialism had ever brought civilization to anyone. We trace his argument from the colonial lie all the way to a surprising evolution: by 1987, Césaire had loosened Negritude from skin color entirely. He redefined it not just as Blackness, but as a shared condition of having been dispossessed, marginalized, and refused. Follow us on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/threads_of_ifriqiya ] and TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@threadsofifriqiya]
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