You are a living magnet. What you attract into your life is in harmony with your dominant thoughts.  - Brian Tracy
_____________________________

                       TALK BACK

To all my ladies and sister friends...I need to know from you...What do men want? What makes them tick? Are they really from another planet? Are you a lady who is still trying for answers? Well you're not alone. In your opinion; tell us what you think men want. 

Brothers you may help us out too. Just what is it do you really, really, really want? Contact us

 

  Wallblake Airport scene 

     Take our quick survey

__________________________________

Read what people are saying You must be a member to post comments.

Tell us the shows you would love to hear again

Join Let's Talk. Membership is free and you can win great  prizes.

Read the blog. Everyone can post comments here.                                                                                                                                            

____________________________

Tell us where you are and how you listen to the show

       

Greetings to all - I listen to Let's Talk from Barbados

_________________________________                                                                                                     
To all off-island listeners - Thank you for listening to Let's Talk. The live streaming from Radio AXA seems to be working better than usual lately. You are now better able to listen online. Feel free to call and join in the conversation. 

_________________________

This space is for your Ad call (264) 772-7421 or Contact us  

 

The Life and Times of Aime Cesaire

                                     Aimé Césaire in 1993

               Photographed by Chester Higgins Jr. Aimé Césaire in 1993.

Rita and IjahnyaMay 8th 08 - The Life and Times of Aime Cesaire - Where do you begin? How do you begin exploring the life of one of the Caribbean's greatest literary giant? This was the question we tried to answer on Let's Talk as Sister Ijahnya Christian (right) and Mrs Rita Celestine Carty joined the conversation to explore the life and the writings of Aime Cesaire.

Aimé Fernand David Césaire  was born on June 26th 1913, in Basse-Pointe, Martinique. He was an anticolonialist poet and politician who was honored throughout the French-speaking world and who was an early proponent of black pride.

Mr. Césaire was one of the Caribbean’s most celebrated cultural figures. He was especially celebrated in his native Martinique, which sent him to the French parliament for nearly half a century and where he was repeatedly elected mayor of Fort-de-France, the capital city.

In Paris in the 1930s Cesaire helped found the journal Black Student, which gave birth to the idea of “negritude,” a call to blacks to cultivate pride in their heritage. His 1950 book “Discourse on Colonialism” was considered a classic of French political literature.

Cesaire's poetry has been described as a style between "artistic 'modernism' and black consciousness" His writing can also be characterized as surreal.

Cesaire is closely related to the word "negritude," which signifies the black youth's attempt to maintain a positive racial identity. Many of his works combine the two ideas of negritude and surrealism. 
 
It was fascinating to listen to  Rita and Ijahnya explain the writings of this great Caribbean poet, author, and politician. Rita spoke from the heart having studied all the works of Cesaire. She first became enthralled with his writings as a student in college and her knowledge and passion about Cesaire is refreshing.
 
Some of Cesaire's best works includes:
  • Cahier d'un retour au pays natal (1939), Return to my native land (bilingual edition), Paris: Présence Africaine 1968
  • Armes miraculeuses (1946)
  • Soleil cou coupé (1948)
  • Corps perdu (1950)
  • Une Tempête, adapted from The Tempest by William Shakespeare: adaptation pour un théâtre nègre. Paris: Seuil, 1969, 1997. A Tempest, New York: Ubu repertory 1986
  • Une Saison au Congo. Paris: Seuil, 1966, 2001. A season in the Congo, New York 1968, A play about Patrice Lumumba. 
  • Discours sur le colonialisme, Paris: Présence Africaine, 1953.
  • Toussaint Louverture; La Révolution française et le problème colonial. Paris: Présence Africaine, 1960.

Mr. Césaire’s ideas were honored and when the news of his death was announced on April 17th 2008 his passing was mourned in Africa and France as well as the Caribbean.

Césaire was given the honour of a State Funeral, in Fort-de-France and the French President Nicolas Sarkozy was present. Martinique's airport at Le Lamentin was renamed Martinique Aime Cesaire International Airport on January 15th 2007. 

       my negritude is not a stone
nor a deafness flung against the clamor of the day
my negritude is not a white speck of dead water
on the dead eye of the earth
my negritude is neither tower nor cathedral

it plunges into the red flesh of the soil
it plunges into the blaxing flesh of the sky
my negritude riddles with holes
the dense affliction of its worthy patience.

 

 

   Cariwa

    Meet our Guests

_________________

Have your own easy to use website. You will have total control and be able to edit, upload and completely manage your site. 

Call Systems and Solutions International (599) 524-0663

________________

       Island Life

    Mango Tree

          "Mango Season"

See gallery for more pics

_________________

This Space Reserved for your Ad. Call (264) 772-7421 or Contact Us