Black Orpheus: Translated by S. W. AllenPrésence africaine, 1963 - 65 pages |
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Page 7
... feel , as I , the sensation of being seen . For the white man has enjoyed for three thousand years the privilege of seeing without being seen . It was a seeing pure and uncomplicated ; the light of his eyes drew all things from their ...
... feel , as I , the sensation of being seen . For the white man has enjoyed for three thousand years the privilege of seeing without being seen . It was a seeing pure and uncomplicated ; the light of his eyes drew all things from their ...
Page 36
... feel that Lero claims the liberation of the black ; all the more does he promulgate the formal liberation of the imagination ; in this completely abstract game , no alliance of words even remotely evokes Africa . Remove these poems from ...
... feel that Lero claims the liberation of the black ; all the more does he promulgate the formal liberation of the imagination ; in this completely abstract game , no alliance of words even remotely evokes Africa . Remove these poems from ...
Page 50
... feel the fundamental unity of this double movement if one reflects upon the relation more and more direct that psychiatrists establish between anguish and sexual desire . From it there is one sole , proud surging forth , which can also ...
... feel the fundamental unity of this double movement if one reflects upon the relation more and more direct that psychiatrists establish between anguish and sexual desire . From it there is one sole , proud surging forth , which can also ...
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Africa ancients sleep anthology authentic automatic writing black country black orpheus black poet black soul bottom brothers of color centuries Christianity colonist colonization common concepts cosmic creates Dakar dance dawn desire destroy dialectic Diop dreams earth essence Europe European Eurydice evokes exile existential attitude express fecundity feel fire flesh French language future Haiti Haitian heart human hurled intuition Lero liberty little steps lives Lucretius Mallarmé memory misery mystic Nature necessary negation Negro poetry night nocturnal non-being objective oppressed passion poem of Césaire poetic Port-au-Prince present pride profound proletariat prose pure race racial racism rapport revolt revolutionary rhythm Saint-Louis says Senghor sea liced secret Senegal sense sexual shadow silence skin slavery sole songs speak STANFORD STANFORD UNIVERSITY struggle subjective suffering surpass surrealism symbolizes take conscience techniques theme tom-tom Toussaint Louverture turns unity vegetal white culture white words white worker wishes woman