Poésie et francophonie

In this interview conducted in 1985 by Serge Bourjea, then assistant professor at the university of Dakar, Léopold Sédar Senghor, recently elected member of the Académie française, reflects on the future of the French language, and more specifically on how its opening up to the Francophonie constitu...

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Main Authors: Léopold Sédar Senghor, Serge Bourjea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut des textes & manuscrits modernes (ITEM) 2024-10-01
Series:Continents manuscrits
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/coma/11908
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author Léopold Sédar Senghor
Serge Bourjea
author_facet Léopold Sédar Senghor
Serge Bourjea
author_sort Léopold Sédar Senghor
collection DOAJ
description In this interview conducted in 1985 by Serge Bourjea, then assistant professor at the university of Dakar, Léopold Sédar Senghor, recently elected member of the Académie française, reflects on the future of the French language, and more specifically on how its opening up to the Francophonie constitutes a major challenge for its vitality. This is an opportunity for the poet-president to look back at his various sources of inspiration, drawn both from the European literary tradition and from what he called “the school of traditional Negro-African poetry”, and to show just how essential this cross-fertilization is to his poetic writing. The two agrégés do not shy away from the puzzling question of the status and future of the French language in ex-colonized countries, which does not prevent Senghor from setting out the reasons why he sees it as the possible language of the civilization of the Universal.
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language English
publishDate 2024-10-01
publisher Institut des textes & manuscrits modernes (ITEM)
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series Continents manuscrits
spelling doaj-art-5f370576abfb45a2b6d0adfeb14b2bef2024-12-09T13:56:39ZengInstitut des textes & manuscrits modernes (ITEM)Continents manuscrits2275-17422024-10-012310.4000/12jtcPoésie et francophonieLéopold Sédar SenghorSerge BourjeaIn this interview conducted in 1985 by Serge Bourjea, then assistant professor at the university of Dakar, Léopold Sédar Senghor, recently elected member of the Académie française, reflects on the future of the French language, and more specifically on how its opening up to the Francophonie constitutes a major challenge for its vitality. This is an opportunity for the poet-president to look back at his various sources of inspiration, drawn both from the European literary tradition and from what he called “the school of traditional Negro-African poetry”, and to show just how essential this cross-fertilization is to his poetic writing. The two agrégés do not shy away from the puzzling question of the status and future of the French language in ex-colonized countries, which does not prevent Senghor from setting out the reasons why he sees it as the possible language of the civilization of the Universal.https://journals.openedition.org/coma/11908poetrySenghor (Léopold Sédar)French languagefrancophoneFrench Academylinguistic evolution
spellingShingle Léopold Sédar Senghor
Serge Bourjea
Poésie et francophonie
Continents manuscrits
poetry
Senghor (Léopold Sédar)
French language
francophone
French Academy
linguistic evolution
title Poésie et francophonie
title_full Poésie et francophonie
title_fullStr Poésie et francophonie
title_full_unstemmed Poésie et francophonie
title_short Poésie et francophonie
title_sort poesie et francophonie
topic poetry
Senghor (Léopold Sédar)
French language
francophone
French Academy
linguistic evolution
url https://journals.openedition.org/coma/11908
work_keys_str_mv AT leopoldsedarsenghor poesieetfrancophonie
AT sergebourjea poesieetfrancophonie