Bibtex export

 

@article{ Aguirre Aguirre2021,
 title = {Horizontes trágicos del cuerpo: la invención en Aimé Césaire y Frantz Fanon},
 author = {Aguirre Aguirre, Carlos},
 journal = {Griot: Revista de Filosofia},
 number = {2},
 pages = {271-292},
 volume = {21},
 year = {2021},
 issn = {2178-1036},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.31977/grirfi.v21i2.2390},
 abstract = {This text addresses the problems of tragedy, invention and the colonized body in the writings of the martinican thinkers Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon. To do this, at first we stop at the link that exists between the tragedy of the experiences of the black bodies alluded to in the writings of the aforementioned authors with the controls and reifications of colonial modernity. In a second moment, we discuss the invention of poetic image in Césaire's Notebook of a Return to Native Land and how the agency of a body of its own excels out from it through a critical rewriting of the Atlantic Triangle. Next, in a third section, we reflect on Fanon's lived experience in his work Black skin, white masks in order to trace his tragic, self-destructive nature, and his inventive power. Finally, it is concluded that Césaire and Fanon make the invention a possibility of constructing another historical imagination of the body outside of the racial orders of colonial modernity.},
}