The only young adult book to tell the story of Aimé Césaire, the rise
of Negritude, and the crusade for Black African and Caribbean
independence from colonial rule.
Aimé Césaire was a poet and, later, a politician from the Caribbean
island of Martinique, who spoke out against the sufferings and
humiliations endured by the peoples of the former French colonies. In
Aimé Césaire: No to Humiliation, we are with Césaire in 1930s Paris.
The young Martinican poet and his friends Léopold Sédar Senghor and Léon
Gontran Damas are launching the Negritude movement. Together, they
celebrate their Black African roots, protesting French colonial rule and
policies of assimilation. They invite West Indians, Senegalese,
Guyanese, and others to reject the suffocating French colonial presence
and to take pride in their accents, their cultures and their shared
histories.
Aimé's great book-length poem, Notebook on the Return to the Native
Land, and other works, are a global inspiration. His speeches enliven
the crowds back home in Martinique, and he rises in the political arena,
defending Martinican identity. As a writer, as the Mayor of
Fort-de-France and deputy of the French National Congress, Aimé Césaire
continues to write and to fight against colonial power and for the
dignity of Black peoples everywhere.