{"title":"Nicolás Guillén and Poesia Negra de Expressão Portuguesa (1953)","authors":"Lanie Millar","doi":"10.2307/j.ctvsn3p6g.34","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The 1953 poetry notebook Poesia negra de expressão portuguesa [Black Poetry of Portuguese Expression] was first work that brought together negritude poetry from across the Lusophone African world. Edited by Angolan intellectual Mário Pinto de Andrade and Sao Tomean poet Francisco Tenreiro, the short collection declares itself an anti-colonial intervention into the negritude movements underway in the Francophone world since the 1930s. Little has been made, however, of the notebook’s dedication to Cuban poet Nicolás Guillén or the inclusion of Guillén’s poem “Son Número 6” [Son Number 6] in the collection. This article argues that the juxtaposition of Guillén’s “Son No. 6” with the Lusophone poems consolidates an alternative transatlanticism that emphasizes Guillén as a black poet, rather than themes of racial and cultural mixing, and thus shifts the circuits of collaboration away from francophone negritude's colony-metropole axis to the South. Poetic techniques such as call-and-response and the socially-embedded, metonymic construction of blackness shared among Guillén and Lusophone poets Agostinho Neto, Noémia de Sousa, and António Jacinto show how the notebook establishes the origins of both negritude poetry and negritude identity in the trans-Atlantic poetic conversation itself.","PeriodicalId":53595,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Transatlantic Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-11-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Transatlantic Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvsn3p6g.34","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The 1953 poetry notebook Poesia negra de expressão portuguesa [Black Poetry of Portuguese Expression] was first work that brought together negritude poetry from across the Lusophone African world. Edited by Angolan intellectual Mário Pinto de Andrade and Sao Tomean poet Francisco Tenreiro, the short collection declares itself an anti-colonial intervention into the negritude movements underway in the Francophone world since the 1930s. Little has been made, however, of the notebook’s dedication to Cuban poet Nicolás Guillén or the inclusion of Guillén’s poem “Son Número 6” [Son Number 6] in the collection. This article argues that the juxtaposition of Guillén’s “Son No. 6” with the Lusophone poems consolidates an alternative transatlanticism that emphasizes Guillén as a black poet, rather than themes of racial and cultural mixing, and thus shifts the circuits of collaboration away from francophone negritude's colony-metropole axis to the South. Poetic techniques such as call-and-response and the socially-embedded, metonymic construction of blackness shared among Guillén and Lusophone poets Agostinho Neto, Noémia de Sousa, and António Jacinto show how the notebook establishes the origins of both negritude poetry and negritude identity in the trans-Atlantic poetic conversation itself.
1953年出版的诗歌笔记本Poesia negra de express o portuesa[葡萄牙语表达的黑人诗歌]是第一部汇集了整个葡语非洲世界的黑人诗歌的作品。由安哥拉知识分子Mário Pinto de Andrade和圣多美诗人Francisco Tenreiro编辑,这部短篇文集宣称自己是对20世纪30年代以来法语世界正在进行的黑人运动的反殖民干预。然而,很少有人提到这本笔记本是献给古巴诗人Nicolás guillsamen的,也很少有人提到guillsamen的诗“Son Número 6”收录在这本笔记本中。本文认为,将吉列姆的《儿子6号》与葡语诗歌并放在一起,巩固了另一种跨大西洋主义,强调吉列姆是黑人诗人,而不是种族和文化混合的主题,从而将合作的电路从讲法语的黑人的殖民地-大都市轴线转移到南方。诸如“呼唤与回应”的诗歌技巧、社会嵌入的、对黑人的转义构建,这些都是吉尔-海姆和葡萄牙语诗人Agostinho Neto、nosamia de Sousa和António Jacinto所共有的,这些都显示了笔记本如何在跨大西洋诗歌对话中确立了黑人诗歌和黑人身份的起源。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Transatlantic Studies is the official journal of the Transatlantic Studies Association. It began publication in 2003. The focus is on the transatlantic region broadly defined to include the Americas and the Caribbean in the west and Europe extending to Russia the Middle East and Africa in the east.The Journal explores and provides multi-disciplinary analysis of this vital region of the world through engagement principally with: - History - Literature - IR and Security Studies - International Law and Organisation - Culture and Race - Slavery and Migration - Film - Economics and Business Studies - Planning and the Environment It is published quarterly and accepts proposals for themed issues as well as individual articles between 5-12,000 words in length. It also has a short book review section. Two peer reviewers evaluate all submissions and any manuscript that divides opinion is then submitted to a third peer reviewer for a final decision. The JTS aims to provide decisions on submissions within 12 weeks.