Negritude was both a literary and ideological movement led by french-speaking black writers and intellectuals from france colonies in africa and the caribbean in the 1930s. the movement is marked by its rejection of european colonization and its role in the african diaspora, pride in "blackness and traditional african values and culture, mixed with an undercurrent of marxist ideals. Negritude was born from a shared experience of discrimination and oppression and an attempt to dispel stereotypes and create a new black consciousness. source.
Which of the following does the reading demonstrate?
a. black writers embraced new ways of expressing feelings about their heritage.
b. france did allow colonial people to become educated.
c. colonial people were not interested in marxist ideals.
d. black intellectuals encouraged colonial people to assimilate to french culture.