Monday, April 27, 2020
Wretched Of The Earth Essays - Marxist Humanists, Postcolonialism
  Wretched Of The Earth  Fanon's book, "The Wretched Of The Earth" like Foucault's  "Discipline and Punish" question the basic assumptions that underlie  society. Both books writers come from vastly different perspectives and this  shapes what both authors see as the technologies that keep the populace in line.    Foucault coming out of the French intellectual class sees technologies as  prisons, family, mental institutions, and other institutions and cultural traits  of French society. In contrast Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) born in Martinique into  a lower middle class family of mixed race ancestry and receiving a conventional  colonial education sees the technologies of control as being the white colonists  of the third world. Fanon at first was a assimilationist thinking colonists and  colonized should try to build a future together. But quickly Fanon's  assimilationist illusions were destroyed by the gaze of metropolitan racism both  in France and in the colonized world. He responded to the shattering of his  neo-colonial identity, his white mask, with his first book, Black Skin, White    Mask, written in 1952 at the age of twenty-seven and originally titled "An    Essay for the Disalienation of Blacks." Fanon defined the colonial  relationship as one of the non recognition of the colonized's humanity, his  subjecthood, by the colonizer in order to justify his exploitation. Fanon's next  novel, "The Wretched Of The Earth" views the colonized world from the  perspective of the colonized. Like Foucault's questioning of a disciplinary  society Fanon questions the basic assumptions of colonialism. He questions  whether violence is a tactic that should be employed to eliminate colonialism.    He questions whether native intellectuals who have adopted western methods of  thought and urge slow decolonization are in fact part of the same technology of  control that the white world employs to exploit the colonized. He questions  whether the colonized world should copy the west or develop a whole new set of  values and ideas. In all these questionings of basic assumptions of colonialism    Fanon exposes the methods of control the white world uses to hold down the  colonies. Fanon calls for a radical break with colonial culture, rejecting a  hypocritical European humanism for a pure revolutionary consciousness. He exalts  violence as a necessary pre-condition for this rupture. Fanon supported the most  extreme wing of the FLN, even opposing a negotiated transition to power. His  book though sees the relationship and methods of control in a simplistic light;  he classifies whites, and native intellectuals who have adopted western values  and tactics as enemies. He fails to see how these natives and even the white  world are also victims who in what Foucault calls the stream of power and  control are forced into their roles by a society which itself is forced into a  role. Fanon also classifies many colonized people as mentally ill. In his last  chapter he brings up countless cases of children, adults, and the elderly who  have been driven mad by colonialism. In one instance he classifies two children  who kill their white playmate with a knife as insane. In isolating these  children classifying there disorders as insanity caused by colonialism he  ironically is using the very thought systems and technologies that Foucault  points out are symptomatic of the western disciplinary society. Fanon's book  filled with his anger at colonial oppression was influential to Black Panther  members Newton and Seale. As students at Merrit College, in Oakland, they had  organized a Soul Students' Advisory Council, which was the first group to demand  that what became known as African-American studies be included in the school  curriculum. They parted ways with the council when their proposal to bring a  drilled and armed squad of ghetto youths onto campus, in commemoration of    Malcolm X's birthday, the year after his assassination, was rejected. Seale and    Newton's unwillingness to acquiesce to more moderate views was in large part  influenced by Fanon's ideas of a true revolutionary consciousness. In retrospect    Fanon's efforts to expose the colonial society were successful in eliminating  colonialism but not in eliminating the oppression taking place in the colonized  world. Today the oppression of French colonialism in Algeria has been replaced  by the violence of the civil war in Algeria, and the dictator of Algeria who has  annulled popular elections, a the emergence of radical Islam which seeks to  replace colonial repression with religious oppression. But this violence might  be one of the lasting symptoms of Frances colonial brutality which scared the  lives of Algerians and Algerian society; perverting peoples sense of right and  wrong freedom and discipline.    
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