Alienated consciousness is what gave rise to Négritude. ‘Négritude represents an African crisis of consciousness, its most significant modern expression; it is the watershed that marks the emergence of a modern African consciousness’ (Irele 2011, p. 64). The movement is described by Senghor in varied and positive ways.. Léopold Senghor (born Oct. 9, 1906, Joal, Senegal, French West Africa [now in Senegal]—died Dec. 20, 2001, Verson, France) was a poet, teacher, and statesman, the first president of Senegal, and a major proponent of the concept of Negritude.. Senghor was the son of a prosperous Serer planter and trader. His mother was a Roman Catholic and sent him to a nearby Catholic mission and seminary.
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Senghor – Black, French and African: A Life of Léopold Sédar Senghor. By Janet G. Vaillant. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1990. Pp. xii+388. £23.95.. He died in December on 20 December 2001 at the age of 95. The house in Verson, north-west France, where Léopold Sédar Senghor spent the final years of his life with his second wife, Colette.