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Fanon [Audio Cassette]

John Edgar Wideman (Author), Dion Graham (Narrator)
2.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: RecordedBooks (2008)
  • ISBN-10: 1436135036
  • ISBN-13: 978-1436135030
  • Average Customer Review: 2.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

More About the Author

JOHN EDGAR WIDEMAN is the author of more than twenty works of fiction and nonfiction, including the award-winning Brothers and Keepers, Philadelphia Fire, and most recently the story collection God's Gym. He is the recipient of two PEN/ Faulkner Awards and has been nominated for the National Book Award. He teaches at Brown University.

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:    (0)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.2 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A meditation rather than a narrative, January 3, 2009
This review is from: Fanon (Hardcover)
This book uses the idea of Frantz Fanon, and a few details of his life, as a device for meditating on Wideman's own life and our conflicted modern society. It is somewhat interesting as a work of literary art, in that it provides a fairly abstract stream of consciousness about identity and society. I suspect that it would have been particularly interesting if I were a slightly past middle aged African American male intellectual--which I am not.

Instead, I'm a reader interested in narrative and in Frantz Fanon. There is not much of either here. I read this book because it was in the NYTimes top 100 of the year, and got the impression it was a fictionalized narrative about pursuing Fanon's legacy. I suppose it is about that, but only in the most abstract sense. Mostly it is flitering thoughts about black power, intellectuals, prison, receiving heads in the mail, Pittsburgh, old age, colonialism, etc.. There does seem to be an element of self-indulgence in the writing here, but I was not completely put off by that: Wideman is clearly a brilliant man with interesting experiences and perspectives. So I did read the book with some appreciation for the thinking involved, and I suspect a specific type of reader might really enjoy this book. But ultimately I didn't get fully engaged, nor did I take much away beyond an abstract appreciation.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Collage of a Life Work, August 9, 2011
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This review is from: Fanon (Paperback)
A realist novel about Fanon this is not: but it is a beautiful collage of Wideman's life work. Readers of Fanon's other texts, perhaps especially Brothers and Keepers, will recognize Wideman's prose style,narrative experiments, and concern with the matrix of relationships between kin at once trapped in the clock-time of our everyday life and the Great Time in which converge the temporalities of past, present, and future.

The scenes in which John Edgar Wideman (as narrator and counterpart to the persona of "Thomas") imagines his mother with Fanon as he lay dying in a Bethesda, MD hospital are exquisite the thoughtful. In an interview elsewhere, Wideman explains that his mother and Fanon represent for him exemplary and personal models of how to live ethically, in ordinary life and in the public history of political revolution, respectively.

Fanon has been the subject of a resurgent interest in post-colonial and radical anti-colonial Black theory--Wideman's novel bears the melancholy traces of a time (our time) when the hopes for anti-colonial revolutions have diminished even as the rights for which people fought continue to be ignored.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars To Frantz Fanon not about him, December 2, 2009
This review is from: Fanon (Hardcover)
Last year, John Edgar Wideman published "Fanon; a Novel."

I'm struggling through it, not because it's such a very bad book, but because it deals with decolonization of his mind quite a bit more roughly than I'm ready for. The head in a box delivered by the UPS man is a strong, hopefully only literary image. Mr. Wideman writes to Fanon, not so much about him, except that knowledge of how Fanon inspired the oppressed to find liberation is very important. Mr. Wideman has some bones to pick, and the gumption to pick at them.

Decolonizing ones mind and spirit can be a very messy business. Other reviewers may have missed this point. Courage all!

P.S. I'm an older white man in a long term inter-racial marriage and late in life discovering how pervasive colonization has been.
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