- Tenreiro, Francisco José
-
▪ São Toméan poetborn January 20, 1921, São Tomédied December 31, 1963, LisbonAfrican poet writing in Portuguese, whose verse expresses the sufferings caused by colonialist exploitation of the indentured labourers of the island of São Tomé.Tenreiro, the son of a Portuguese administrator and an African woman, spent much of his life in Portugal, where he earned a doctorate in geography from the University of Lisbon in 1961. Subsequently, he worked as a professor at the Higher Institute for Overseas Social and Political Sciences in Lisbon and became a deputy representing São Tomé and Príncipe in the Portuguese National Assembly.Tenreiro's two volumes of poems, Ilha do Nome Santo (1942; “Island of a Holy Name”) and the posthumous Coração em Africa (1964; “Courage in Africa”), record both a love of Africa as well as a fraternal bond with oppressed blacks throughout the world. A scholar of merit as well as a literary critic, he wrote Panorama de Literatura Norte-Americana (1945), which was inspired by reading black poets of the Harlem Renaissance. In 1958 he coedited, with Mário de Andrade, a major anthology of Lusophone African poetry, Antologia de Poesia Negra de Expressão Portuguesa.
* * *
Universalium. 2010.