4. Violence, Pathologies, and Resistance in Frantz FanonLori Jo Marso
Frantz Fanon and Algeria : alienation and violence.PB Modern European LanguagesKessous, Naaman
Fanon insists that through violence in revolutionary decolonization, the colonized, first, can bind the colonized people together as a whole against colonialism; second, they can make a clear break from colonialism; third, violence is a cleansing force since it can erase the inferiority complex of...
In 1973 Irene Gendzier published a book on Frantz Fanon, a black French-educated physician and psychiatrist who became the apostle of violence in the anticolonial movement in Algiers. In her preface Professor Gendzier states that she had intended at the outset of her research to write a ...
Daiva Stasiulis and Nira Yuval-Davis, eds., Unsettling Settler Societies: Artic- ulations of Gender, Race, Ethnicity and Class (London, 1995); Udo Krautwurst, "What is Settler Colonialism? An Anthropological Meditation on Frantz Fanon's `Concerning Violence'," History and Anthropology 14, no...
Udo Krautwurst, "What is Settler Colonialism? An Anthropological Meditation on Frantz Fanon's `Concerning Violence'" (History and Anthropology 14.1, 2003), 55-72; Francesca Merlan, "Reply to Patrick Wolfe" (Social Analysis 40, 1997), 10-19; Elizabeth Povinelli, "Reading Ruptures, Rupturing ...
The explanatory value of contextual shift is presented through an account of strategic appropriations of 'violence' by revolutionary actors during the Long 1960s, with particular attention paid to the uses made by Frantz Fanon and Stokely Carmichael.Blanchard, Alexander...
Erin McCoy
To do that, I engage the arguments of Frantz Fanon, M. K. Gandhi, and Hannah Arendt. While these authors diverge with regard to the role of violence in popular struggles, all three conceptualize ways to achieve nonviolent politics or at least to reduce the role of violence in normal every...
To do that, I engage the arguments of Frantz Fanon, M. K. Gandhi, and Hannah Arendt. While these authors diverge with regard to the role of violence in popular struggles, all three conceptualize ways to achieve nonviolent politics or at least to reduce the role of violence in normal every...