Early life
Césaire (née Roussi) was born in Poterie des Trois-Ilets on 11 August 1915 to Flore Roussi (née William), a school teacher, and Benoït Roussi, a sugar factory worker. She began her education at her local primary school in Rivière-Salée in Martinique (which still had the status of a French colonial territory at that time), before attending a girls' boarding-school in the capital,University and marriage to Aimé Césaire
In 1933, Suzanne Roussi traveled to Toulouse for her first year of preparatory school and in 1934, she moved to Paris to continue her studies. There, she met Léopold Sédar Senghor, who introduced her toLiterary career
Césaire wrote in French and published seven essays during her career as a writer. All seven of these essays were published between 1941 and 1945 in'' Tropiques''. Her writing explored themes such as Caribbean identity, civilisation, and surrealism. While her writing remains largely unknown to Anglophone readers, excerpts from her essays "Leo Frobenius and the Problem of Civilisations", "A Civilisation's Discontent", "1943: Surrealism and Us", and "The Great Camouflage" can be found translated into English in the anthology ''The Refusal of the Shadow: Surrealism and the Caribbean'' (Verso, 1996), edited by Michael Richardson. Césaire had a particular affinity with surrealism, which she described as "the tightrope of our hope". In her essay "1943: Surrealism and Us", she called for a Martinican surrealism: "Our surrealism will then deliver it the bread of its depths. Finally those sordid contemporary antinomies of black/white, European/African, civilised/savage will be transcended. The magical power of the mahoulis will be recovered, drawn forth from living sources. Colonial stupidity will be purified in the blue welding flame. Our value as metal, our cutting edge of steel, our amazing communions will be recovered." Césaire also developed a close relationship withReception and influence
Césaire was a pioneer in the search for a distinct Martiniquan literary voice. Though she was attacked by some Caribbean writers, following an early edition of ''Tropiques'', for copying traditional French styles of poetry as well as supposedly promoting "The Happy Antilles" view of the island advanced by French colonialism, her essay of 1941, "Misère d'une poésie", condemned what she termed "Littérature de hamac. Littérature de sucre et de vanille. Tourisme littéraire" (Literature of the hammock, of sugar and vanilla. Literary tourism). Her encounter with André Breton opened the way for her development of Afro-Surrealism, which followed in the footsteps of her use of surrealist concepts to illuminate the colonial dilemma. Her dictum - "La poésie martiniquaise sera cannibale ou ne sera pas" (Cannibal poetry or nothing) - was an anti-colonial appropriation of a surrealist trope. Suzanne Césaire's repudiation of simple idealised answers - whether assimilationist, Africanist, or creole - to the situation of colonialism in the Caribbean has proved increasingly influential in later postcolonial studies. Suzanne Césaire’s work from the first year of Tropiques raves over her European inspirations such as the German ethnographer Leo Frobenius, the French professor, philosopher, and art critic Emile Chartier, and the surrealist Andre Breton, and their potential position in Martinique. Suzanne Césaire created a portrait of the complexity of Caribbean identity to European literary tradition. Recent scholar Joseph-Gabriel argues that Césaire contributed an influential foundation for subsequent Caribbean anti-imperialist literature and political activity. Although Césaire published relatively few essays, her continued influence can be traced via personal letters and also remembrances from Haitian students. In letters to Gauclére, Césaire described her role in Haiti as an emissary who provided teacher training, wrote literary analysis, and edited dissertations for the purpose of supporting Aime's teaching. Haitian student activists Gérald Bloncourt and Michael Löwy recalled Breton's public speaking on surrealism as helpful in inciting the overthrow of undemocratic Haitian President Lescot. Suzanne Cesaire's work celebrated the multiethnic and multicultural influences that formed the Caribbean cultural identity of her era. Though highly criticized for appropriating black stereotypes, she used them in her writing in order to provoke both the colonizer and colonized to reexamine their perceptions of race. She wrote "The most troubling reality is our own. We shall act. This land, our land, can only be what we want it to be".Works
Essays published in ''Tropiques''
* "Leo Frobenius et le problème des civilisations" (April 1941) * "Alain et l'esthétique" (July 1941) * "André Breton, poète" (October 1941) * "Misère d'une poésie" (January 1942) * "Malaise d'une civilization" (April 1942) * "1943: Le surréalisme et nous" (October 1943) * "Le Grand camouflage" (1945)Books
* Suzanne Césaire, This book is a collection her seven literary essays. * Suzanne Césaire, A translation of her seven literary essays.English translations
* "The Malaise of a Civilization" and "The Great Camouflage" in *" Surrealism and Us" and "The Domain of the Marvelous" (extract from the essay «Alain et l'esthétique») in * "The Domain of the Marvelous" (extract from the essay «Alain et l'esthétique») in * "André Breton, Poet", Guy Ducornet and Franklin Rosemont, translators; "Discontent of a Civilization", Penelope Rosemont, translator; "1943: Surrealism and Us" and "The Domain of the Marvelous" (extract from the essay "Alain et l'esthétique"), Erin Gibson, translator; in * "Leo Frobenius and the Problem of Civilizations", "A Civilization's Discontent", "1943 : Surrealism and Us" and "The Great Camouflage", Krzysztof Fijalkowski and Michael Richardson, translators; inSee also
* '' Antillanité'' * ''References
Further reading
* L. Kesteloot, ''Black Writers in French'' (1974) * Maryse Condé, "Unheard Voice: Suzanne Cėsaire and the Construct of a Caribbean Identity" in A. Newson ed., ''The Transforming Voices of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars'' (1998) {{DEFAULTSORT:Cesaire, Suzanne Surrealist writers 1915 births 1966 deaths Martiniquais women writers 20th-century French women writers 20th-century French essayists French women essayists Aimé Césaire