It is exactly the ideal way of living. The answer is different for everyone Because some people are eager for more and others are less eager for others. In Sembene Ousmane's short story "Black Girl", the reader understands the determination that Diouana will climb the social class ladder. As a hero, she abandoned the idea that she would leave her house in Africa, which was a maid for a wealthy white family in the past few years. Her perfect lifestyle vision is to live in France. There, she imagines that he earned millions of dollars of money and soaked in wealth.
Soviet educated Senegalese writer and coach Ottoman Semainin, sometimes called African Brecht, took his short story into his first feature film in 1966. That means "Black Girl ..." to Diouanne (Therese N'Bissine Diop), a young woman working as a tutor at Dakar's white bourgeois French home. Initially, Diouanne was excited about the prospect of spending time with his family at the French Riviera in the summer, but soon realized that the attitude of the employer in France changed dramatically. The identity is covered by her race. As a true classic of African films, black girls are equally effective in psychological exploration of prejudice, attribution, and gender.
Born on January 1, 1923 at Ziguinchor in Senegal, Ousmane Sembene is one of the most outstanding people in the African film and literary circles. Sembene is mainly self-taught, and he is exposed to various experiences and circumstances often reverberating in his work. As soon as he was 15 years old, he began making a living as a fisherman. Sembene also served as a brickworker, plumber, disciple mechanic, port worker, and union member. These experiences have greatly contributed to the creation of Sembene's wonderful literary works and movie works. In this regard, Ousmane believes that his education is the result of his training at "Life University" (qtd in Amuta 137). After the outbreak of World War II, Sembene was elected to the French Army. He returned to Senegal after the war, but he returned to France, worked in Marseille, became an association activist, and joined the French Communist Party in 1960 until Senegal became independent. He passed away on June 9, 2007
"Sembene!" Is the story of Ousmane Sembene, Senegal's most influential writer and cinema producer. Our film won the award, was aired in more than 100 countries and helped introduce the new generation to people known as "the father of African film". However, there are few viewers that are very important to me. I am African. Prior to shooting this movie, our global media culture shifted to so-called "developing countries" or how far from the south worldwide, and to Europe and the United States. The stories accepted by people in Africa are primarily conceived and constructed. New York, Los Angeles, the capital city of Europe. Since the movie was born, Africans, especially colored people, almost disappeared. We are an additional member of the ongoing exhibition of Western power.