Frantz Fanon was born in Martinique in 1925. He served in the French Army during World War II, and later studied medicine and psychiatry in France, where he published his first book, Black Skin, White Masks in 1952. He joined the Algerian Nationalist Movement in the mid-1950s, and published The Wretched of the Earth shortly before dying of leukemia in December 1961.
Praise for The Wretched of the Earth
"Certainly, writers of the sixties inspired by The Wretched of the
Earth--the African novelists Nadine Gordimer, Ayi Kwei Armah, and
Ngugi wa Thiong'o, the Caribbean poet Édouard Glissant, the
Guyanese critic Walter Rodney--saw in the book not an incitement to
kill white people but a chillingly acute diagnosis of the
post-colonial condition: how the West would seek to maintain the
iniquitous international order that had made it rich and powerful,
and how new ruling classes in post-colonial nations would fail to
devise a viable system of their own. One measure of Fanon's
clairvoyance--and the glacial pace of progress--is that, in its
sixtieth year, The Wretched of the Earth remains a vital guide both
to the tenacity of white supremacy in the West and to the moral and
intellectual failures of the 'darker nations' . . . Sixty years
after its publication, The Wretched of the Earth reads increasingly
like a dying Black man's admission of a genuine impossibility: of
moving beyond the world made by white men."--Pankaj Mishra, New
Yorker"The writing of Malcolm X or Eldridge Cleaver or Amiri Baraka
or the Black Panther leaders reveals how profoundly they have been
moved by the thoughts of Frantz Fanon."--Boston Globe"Have the
courage to read this book."--Jean-Paul Sartre"This century's most
compelling theorist of racism and colonialism."--Angela Davis"The
value of The Wretched of the Earth [lies] in its relation to direct
experience, in the perspective of the Algerian revolution . . .
Fanon forces his readers to see the Algerian revolution--and by
analogy other contemporary revolutions--from the viewpoint of the
rebels."--Conor Cruise O'Brien, Nation"The Wretched of the Earth is
an explosion."--Emile Capouya, Saturday Review
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