“Beauty of the Past”: Traditional Aesthetic Canon and Female Characters in Francophone African Literatures

The article examines the influence of traditional aesthetic canon on the representation of women in African poetry and novels. It emphasizes the crucial role of an eminent Senegalian poet Leopold Sedar Senghor (1906–2001), the founder of négritude theory. Since the 1930s, he praised the beauty of a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nina D. Lyakhovskaya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2018-12-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studlit.ru/images/2018-3-4/Lyakhovskaya.pdf
Description
Summary:The article examines the influence of traditional aesthetic canon on the representation of women in African poetry and novels. It emphasizes the crucial role of an eminent Senegalian poet Leopold Sedar Senghor (1906–2001), the founder of négritude theory. Since the 1930s, he praised the beauty of a Black woman in his poems, odes and elegies. Senghor compared European and African aesthetic ideals and prompted African artists and sculptors to seek emotional effect instead of verisimilitude. He found his model in African sculpture and masks. Impersonalism as a major trait of African traditional ideal is inherent in the female images we encounter in African poetry and novels including those by Senghor. Female characters including protagonists in African novels lack any psychological nuances and are poorly individuated. The description of their visual appearance is very schematic: women are compared to terracotta heads of the Ife culture, female figures-amulets of the Ashanti people, etc. Impersonalism decreases literary value of African romances and reveals the presence of archaic collectivist consciousness that does not take into account the unique value of an individual.
ISSN:2500-4247
2541-8564