After completing her preparatory school education, Jane Nardal joined her sister Paulette in Paris in 1923 to study classic literature and French at the
Sorbonne. Over the course of their time in Paris, Paulette and Jane kept a Sunday literary
salon where young Black intellectuals – including Césaire, Senghor and Damas, as well as African-American and
West Indian scholars – met on a weekly basis to exchange theories and build a foundation for a budding race consciousness that would be influential throughout the
Black diaspora. Paulette in particular acted as a point of contact between French-speaking Caribbean and African intellectuals and African-Americans scholars and musicians. the official bimonthly newspaper of the Comité de défense des intérêts de la race noire (Committee for the Defense of the Interests of the Black Race). Her sister Paulette joined the staff in June of that same year. The journal would run on and off for four years, but nevertheless was one of the most popular Black newspapers at the time, printing 12,000–15,000 copies in 1929, compared to the average 2,000–3,000 copies printed by its competitors, including
La Race Nègre and
Le Cri des Nègres. Jane and Paulette Nardal are credited with the rich global perspective provided in the sections "La Dépêche politique," "La Dépêche economique et sociale" and "La Dépêche littéraire" of
La Dépêche africaine. Jane's specialties were primarily political and cultural; she wrote two critical essays for the paper, including "Internationalisme noir" (Black internationalism) which was published in the journal's very first issue. The essay discussed the awakening of race consciousness throughout the Black diaspora and provided some of the theoretical foundations for the Negritude movement. In the October 1928 issue of
La Dépêche africaine, Jane published an essay entitled "Pantins exotiques" (Exotic puppets) which discussed Parisian fascination and exotification of black women and called for black intellectuals to resist the othering of their work. In her writings, Jane also outlined pivotal concepts which would become central to the early Negritude movement, including the global community, Afro-Latin race consciousness, the New French-speaking Negro, and the après-guerre nègre. The latter concept links the formation of a Euro-American community after
World War I to that of a global Black community and addresses the tensions existing within the Black community notably amongst Black elites, those who never experienced slavery, and those who had. She also discussed the construction of a Black diasporic identity, refusing to renounce her latinité (Afro-Latin heritage) or her africanité (African heritage). == Life after Paris ==