The essays collected in this volume study the poetry and thought of four
major Francophone Caribbean writers: Saint-John Perse, Aimé Césaire,
Frantz Fanon and Édouard Glissant. In a context where identity was a
question, an original conception of subjectivity appeared, as the end
point rather than the origin of a process which was inseparably poetic
and political. It entailed an aesthetics of dispersion or errance,
rather than belonging. This volume thus questions the traditional
teleological narrative of negritude as 'renaissance' or 'awakening'. A
careful look at the birth of different negritude movements shows the
complexity of this history and explains Fanon's philosophical and
political critique of the notion. These writers' astonishingly rich
production rests on original aesthetic ideas and philosophical
reflections which the vagaries of history and displacement, and their
comparison with major metropolitan literary movements, had masked.
Fanon's thought is at the heart of the book, but this volume also traces
the important debates these authors had with the major French thinkers
of their time, notably Bergson, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty and Deleuze.