1-20 of 145
Keywords: Frantz Fanon
Sort by
Journal Article
Bryan Cheyette
The American Historical Review, Volume 123, Issue 4, October 2018, Pages 1234–1245, https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhy028
Published: 04 October 2018
...Bryan Cheyette Hannah Arendt Frantz Fanon Paul Gilroy Salman Rushdie Edward Said Shortly after the end of the Second World War, Hannah Arendt, in The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951), refuted the belief in an “eternal antisemitism” as a means of explaining the rise of Nazism...
Chapter
Published: 01 February 2021
...This chapter extends the argument about colonial crisis and epidemicity into the war-time writings of Frantz Fanon and Algerian revolutionary Djamila Boupacha, illuminating an understudied anti-enlightenment scientism in the work of the former and an anti-colonial poetics of the body in the latter...
Chapter
Published: 10 May 2021
...This chapter examines the role of psychiatry in the life and work of Frantz Fanon. It focuses on Fanon’s relationship to institutional psychotherapy which he discovered at the hospital of Saint-Alban where he was a resident from 1952 to 1953, after completing medical school in Lyon. Institutional...
Chapter
Published: 01 August 2016
... Germaine liberation Goodman Jane fellah Marx Karl materialism Sayad Abdelmalek Negritude precolonial rationality irony oral United Kingdom Pierre Bourdieu Frantz Fanon Algerian War Distinction The Wretched of the Earth Black Skin White Masks symbolic domination Front de Libération...
Chapter
Published: 01 September 2014
... of the Bildungsroman, while Nesbitt’s closing reflections identify it as “the founding major work” of “Caribbean critique”—a revolutionary form of thought that extends from Vastey to twentieth-century francophone writers like Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon. These four essays provide a compelling impetus...
Chapter
Published: 01 September 2014
... of the Bildungsroman, while Nesbitt’s closing reflections identify it as “the founding major work” of “Caribbean critique”—a revolutionary form of thought that extends from Vastey to twentieth-century francophone writers like Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon. These four essays provide a compelling impetus...
Chapter
Published: 15 July 2013
... French Revolutionary Massu Jacques Frantz Fanon Wretched of the Earth Violence Algerian Revolution To read Fanon's masterpiece, Les Damnés de la terre, today, a half-century after African decolonization and the triumph of the Algerian Revolution to which Fanon dedicated his life...
Book
Published online: 23 January 2014
Published in print: 15 July 2013
..., Hegel, Marx, and Sartre, was from the start indelibly marked by the Middle Passage, slavery, and colonialism. Chapters and sections address figures such as Toussaint Louverture, Baron de Vastey, Victor Schoelcher, Aimé Césaire, René Ménil, Frantz Fanon, Maryse Condé, and Edouard Glissant, while...
Chapter
Published: 01 June 2009
...Frantz Fanon was born in 1925 in Martinique, one of France's colonies at the time. In 1943 he was posted in Morocco and France to fight with the Free French forces against fascism and collaboration. After the war Fanon returned to Martinique to complete his education, but came back to France...
Chapter
Published: 01 November 2000
...This chapter examines Alejo Carpentier's Caribbean novel El siglo de las luces and Frantz Fanon's Caribbean treatise Peau noir, masques blancs. The work by Aimé Césaire laid the intellectual foundations for both Fanon's and Carpentier's work. The juxtaposition...
Chapter
Published: 09 August 2022
...This chapter draws on insights from W.E.B. Du Bois and Frantz Fanon to explain how racial inequality persists in international migration despite its legal prohibition. It looks at the racial bias hypothesis, the racial reaction hypothesis, the colonial legacy hypothesis, and the expansion...
Chapter
Published: 28 September 2023
...2023 This chapter tackles the cultural and political influences, traditions of thought and activism in Nelson Mandela’s political life. It also considers his growing susceptibility to arguments in favour of active or armed resistance by Algeria-based anti-colonialist Frantz Fanon...
Chapter
Published: 20 August 2015
...This chapter first explores the debate between Jürgen Habermas and Michel Foucault, examining how each author would analyze the issue of domestic violence. The ideas from this debate, however, are insufficient in a context evaluated by Hannah Arendt and Frantz Fanon (separately)—one...
Chapter
Published: 22 December 2024
... the work of Frantz Fanon. The argument in this chapter is twofold. First, racial fetishism describes how racial injustice in the capitalist form of life not only tends to reproduce negative stereotypes of the racialized (racism), but these ideas appear to have power over practical agency because...
Chapter
Published: 01 February 2007
...This chapter provides a theoretical framework that clarifies Kabnis's puzzling observation and odd remark “God, does not exist but nevertheless He is ugly. Hence, what comes from Him is ugly.” This chapter focuses on the works and writings of Frantz Fanon and J. Saunders Redding, the inspiration...
Chapter
Published: 28 November 2011
...This chapter traces colonial urban development in historical and theoretical terms, emphasizing how colonial cities have been theorized in terms of global modernity, capitalism, and imperialism. It focuses on Frantz Fanon’s passage from The Wretched of the Earth, in which Fanon...
Chapter
Published: 20 April 2018
... of religious subjectivity and agency, especially in relation to the inherent violence of colonialism. These issues are examined by referring to the analysis of anticolonial theorists, such as Mohandas K. Gandhi, Frantz Fanon, and Eduardo Mondlane. While colonialism has played an important role in the history...
Chapter
Published: 25 May 2012
...This chapter discusses Frantz Fanon's interest in jazz music, a prominent manifestation of creolized American culture. It argues that Fanon's biographer David Macey misunderstands and underestimates the importance of Fanon's allusions to jazz. It calls into question Françoise Vergès's critique...
Book
Published online: 23 May 2019
Published in print: 13 November 2018
Book
Published online: 24 May 2018
Published in print: 26 December 2017
..., the writers of négritude, Carl Einstein, the Frankfurt School, and Alain Locke. In close studies of the work of Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, D. H. Lawrence, and Claude McKay the book identifies a morphology of literary primitivism that centers on the literary activation of the primitive remnant. Along the way...