Frantz Fanon – The Wretched of the Earth (1961)

[Les Damnés de la Terre]

Frantz Fanon

Fanon, a psychiatrist from Martinique who joined the Algerian revolution, sees colonialism as a system that fractures the identity of the colonized. Colonialism was established through force, while true liberation requires more than political independence; it requires a deep shift to remove the sense of inferiority.

He warns that unless a revolution is rooted in the consciousness of the rural peasantry, it will only result in a new “national middle class” replacing the old oppressors. The book moves from international politics to clinical case studies in chapters like “Concerning Violence” and “Colonial War and Mental Disorders.” With a preface by Jean-Paul Sartre, it became a central text of decolonization, focusing on the difficulty of building a new society from the wreckage of empire.

[Fanon, F. (2001). The wretched of the earth. Tr. by Farrington. Penguin Classics]

Sources:

https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20024388