Frantz Fanon - Wikipedia In The Wretched of the Earth (1961, Les damnés de la terre), published shortly before Fanon's death, Fanon defends the right of a colonized people to use violence to gain independence In addition, he delineated the processes and forces leading to national independence or neocolonialism during the decolonization movement that engulfed much of
Frantz Fanon - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Lewis Gordon’s work on Fanon has argued for the centrality of existentialism and existential framing of key questions across his oeuvre, especially in Gordon’s early work Fanon and the Crisis of European Humanity (1995) and recently in What Fanon Said (2015) The influence of Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty also lends credence to
Frantz Fanon | Biography, Writings, Facts | Britannica Frantz Fanon (1925–61) was a West Indian psychoanalyst and social philosopher known for his theory that some neuroses are socially generated and for his writings on behalf of the national liberation of colonial peoples
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Frantz Fanon - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Frantz Fanon (1925—1961) Frantz Fanon was one of a few extraordinary thinkers supporting the decolonization struggles occurring after World War II, and he remains among the most widely read and influential of these voices
Frantz Fanon’s Enduring Legacy - The New Yorker Fanon, who had spent years in Algeria agitating for its liberation, was, at the time of the book’s publication, little known and dying from leukemia He was thirty-six years old
fanon - Wiktionary, the free dictionary Inherited from Middle French fanon, fannon, from Old French fanon, fanum, from Early Medieval Latin fanō (attested in the Reichenau Glossary), borrowed from Frankish *fano (“ cloth ”), from Proto-Germanic *fanô Cognate with English fane and vane
Revisiting Frantz Fanon: His Life and Legacy on Race, Colonization, and . . . The psychiatrist Frantz Fanon, best known for his works Black Skin, White Masks and The Wretched of the Earth, is a theorist famous for his impassioned writings on revolution and the psychological impacts of racial inequality and colonization His writings have been touted by intellectuals from Jean Paul Sartre to Malcolm X and have inspired
Decolonizing Faith: Frantz Fanon, Liberation Theology, and the Struggle . . . Introduction Frantz Fanon (1925–1961) and Gustavo Gutiérrez (1928–2024), both thinkers from the Global South, emerged from distinct geopolitical margins and intellectual traditions shaped by the legacies of colonialism, systemic exclusion, and contested modernities Fanon, born in Fort-de-France, Martinique—then a French colony marked by racial stratification—was trained in psychiatry