Paris Noir 1950-2000 - Exhibition Catalogue
Centre Georges Pompidou, ISBN 9782386540134,
Hb, 320 pgs, 21 x 28cm
Language: French
Acqn. 36832
In Stock
£52.00
Hb, 320 pgs, 21 x 28cm
Language: French
Acqn. 36832
In Stock
£52.00
Before the independence movements in Africa and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, post-war Paris became a platform for resistance and emancipation, where intellectual figures such as James Baldwin, Leopold Sedar Senghor, Aime and Suzanne Cesaire, and Edouard Glissant paved the way for future postcolonial and decolonial thought.
Bringing together African, African American, Latin American, and Caribbean studies, this catalog serves as a living map of ongoing research-an attempt to chart the remarkable intellectual, artistic, and literary postcolonial history of Paris. The contributors explore circulations, networks, and friendships, revealing the city as a space of both belonging and non-belonging, encounters and isolation, visibility and invisibility.
They engage with concepts such as Black humanism, Negritude, and cosmopolitan and transatlantic modernisms through the lens of postcolonial and decolonial studies, queer and feminist theories, and Afro-diasporic identity politics.
Richly illustrated with numerous previously unpublished reproductions of artworks, the catalog highlights a wide array of artists and writers across disciplines-from painting and sculpture to music, cinema, and literature-through a new transcontinental approach.

