Eulalia Bernard poet of the Costa Rican Negritude and the image of the Black Man
Keywords:
Black man, Negritude, Afro-descendances, Costa Rican Caribbean, ethnical, cultural diversityAbstract
This article briefly analyses the important role assigned by Eulalia Bernard Little, poet of the Costa-Rican Negritude, to the Black man. Even though she is sympathetic with women’s struggles in order to gain a more just position within society, she refuses to participate in the gender struggle, since she considers that the Afro-descendant man and woman must together build a better future.
References
Bernard Little, Eulalia. My Black King. Eugene, Oregon: World Peace University, 1991.
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Field, Michel. “Entretien avec Aimé Césaire”, Diagonales, 34, 1995. Mosby E., Dorothy. Place, Language and Identity in Afro-Costa Rican Literature. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press, 2003, pp. 76-77.
Purcell, Trevor. Banana Fallout: Class, Colour, and Culture among West Indians in Costa Rica. California: University of California, 1993.
Rojas, Miguel. Cultura afroamericana, de esclavos a ciudadanos. Madrid: Ediciones Anaya, 1988.
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Vergès, Françoise. Aimé Césaire : Nègre je suis, nègre je resterai. Entretiens avec Françoise Vergès. Paris : Éditions Albin, 2005.
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