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Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination (Key Contemporary Thinkers)
 
 
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Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination (Key Contemporary Thinkers) [Paperback]

Nigel Gibson (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

0745622615 978-0745622613 July 7, 2003 1
Frantz Fanon was a French psychiatrist turned Algerian revolutionary of Martinican origin, and one of the most important and controversial thinkers of the postwar period. A veritable "intellect on fire," Fanon was a radical thinker with original theories on race, revolution, violence, identity and agency.


This book is an excellent introduction to the ideas and legacy of Fanon. Gibson explores him as a truly complex character in the context of his time and beyond. He argues that for Fanon, theory has a practical task to help change the world. Thus Fanon's "untidy dialectic," Gibson contends, is a philosophy of liberation that includes cultural and historical issues and visions of a future society. In a profoundly political sense, Gibson asks us to reevaluate Fanon's contribution as a critic of modernity and reassess in a new light notions of consciousness, humanism, and social change.


This is a fascinating study that will interest undergraduates and above in postcolonial studies, literary theory, cultural studies, sociology, politics, and social and political theory, as well as general readers.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Caricatured as a mindless apostle of violence, Fanon emerges in Nigel Gibson's rigorous and subtle analysis as a major humanistic thinker about injustice, a serious critic of nationalism and, for the first time, as an impressively profound philosopher of modern post-colonial politics and culture." Edward W. Said, Columbia University


"This definitive interpretation of Fanon brilliantly touches the heart. Gibson presents a compelling and engaging analysis of Fanon's original theory of the racial gaze, of revolution, and of Fanon's complex theory of violence. All the perennial themes of political theory are masterfully presented in this major book. Readers will feel morally civilized after they read it." Teodros Kiros, Harvard University

"Gibson's prose is elegant and clear and this book is, by far, the best introduction to Fanon's life and work. But it does more than this....The key idea that runs throughout the book is that of the dialectic. Gibson argues that there is an unstable, critical and creative element in the heart of FAnon's thought that seeks to move through apparently irreconcilable contradictions. This kind of analysis is what we would expect from any responsible engagement with Fanon's work and Gibson develops it very well. But he goes further and makes an original and significant contribution by showing that for Fanon this kind of progress requires the development of a fighting culture." Richard Pithouse, Sunday Independent

From the Back Cover

Frantz Fanon was a French psychiatrist turned Algerian revolutionary of Martinican origin, and one of the most important and controversial thinkers of the postwar period. A veritable “intellect on fire,” Fanon was a radical thinker with original theories on race, revolution, violence, identity and agency.

This book is an excellent introduction to the ideas and legacy of Fanon. Gibson explores him as a truly complex character in the context of his time and beyond. He argues that for Fanon, theory has a practical task to help change the world. Thus Fanon’s “untidy dialectic,” Gibson contends, is a philosophy of liberation that includes cultural and historical issues and visions of a future society. In a profoundly political sense, Gibson asks us to reevaluate Fanon’s contribution as a critic of modernity and reassess in a new light notions of consciousness, humanism, and social change.

This is a fascinating study that will interest undergraduates and above in postcolonial studies, literary theory, cultural studies, sociology, politics, and social and political theory, as well as general readers.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 264 pages
  • Publisher: Polity; 1 edition (July 7, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0745622615
  • ISBN-13: 978-0745622613
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,300,992 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

The following biography is an excerpt from Wikipedia:

Nigel Gibson is an activist and scholar. He was born in London and was an active in the 1984 -1985 Miners' Strike. While in London he also met South African exiles from the Black Consciousness Movement and, in conversation with the exiles, developed some influential academic work on the movement. He later moved to the United States where he worked with Raya Dunayevskaya in the Marxist Humanism movement, studied with Edward Said and became an important theorist of Frantz Fanon on whom he has written extensively. He has also edited a major collection of work on Theodor Adorno and is a co-editor of a new collection of work on Steve Biko that includes work by scholars of the calibre of Lewis Gordon and Mabogo More. Gibson's work has been widely influential in South Africa where it is often cited by academics and activists. In recent years he has often written and spoken on the South African shack dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo. He is a member of the Committee for Academic Freedom in Africa and has addressed the United Nations.

He was previously the Assistant Director of African Studies at Columbia University and a Research Associate in African-American Studies at Harvard University. He is currently Director of the Honors Program at Emerson College.


In 2009 he was awarded the Fanon prize by the Caribbean Philosophy Association. According to the association "Gibson has set a high standard in Fanon studies and historically-informed political thought on Africa and the Caribbean."


 

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb and accessible contribution to Fanon scholarship, September 12, 2003
By 
Rm Pithouse "Richard Pithouse" (Durban, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination (Key Contemporary Thinkers) (Paperback)
With the publication of Nigel Gibson's 'Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination' we now have a third good book on Fanon to go with Lewis Gordon's 1995 'Fanon and the Crisis of European Man' and Ato Sekyi-Otu's 1996 'Fanon's Dialectic of Experience'.

Gibson's prose is elegant and clear and his book is, by far, the best introduction to Fanon's life and work. But it does much more than this. Gibson explains Fanon's theorization of racism and anti-racism through existential and pyschoanalytic theory, his exploration of the promises and dangers of both Negritude and nationalist resistance to colonialism and his thinking about intellectuals, nationalism and humanism. In each case Gibson is able to draw on an understated but expert knowledge of the philosophical and historical contexts in which Fanon wrote as well as the realities of contemporary Africa. The key idea that runs throughout the book is that of the dialectic. Gibson argues, persuasively, that there is an `unstable, critical, and creative element' at the heart of Fanon's thought that seeks to move through apparently `absolute, irreconcilable contradictions' by working in a critical and actional mode for reciprocal and critical agency in the `fluctuating movement' of the objectified towards humanity. This kind of analysis is what we would expect from any responsible engagement with Fanon's work and Gibson develops it very well. But he goes further and makes an original and significant contribution to thinking about Fanon by showing that for Fanon this kind of progress requires the development of a fighting culture.

Gibson works with this idea throughout his book but deals with it most explicitly in a chapter on Fanon's theorization of the lived experience of resistance in the Algerian revolution. Gibson shows that for Fanon military strategies must be subordinated to the political task of bringing into being a `whole universe of resistances'. In Mexico the Zapatista army uses its guns only to create the space for politics and in Durban the movements against disconnections and evictions use their legal arsenal in the same way. In each case the refusal of an elite politics is premised on the desire to develop radically democratic alternatives that are just too large, too multiple and too immediate to be co-opted or mediated. Gibson goes on to show that for Fanon this process requires a constant defense of imagination and creation of the spaces and attitudes necessary for self-creating cultural regeneration. Gibson also explores, in illuminating depth, how Fanon sees the openness, fluidity and instability of this kind of social movement as the key to transcending the Manichean binaries of both colonialism and many responses to it. So for example if colonialism employs its medical technologies in its project of domination the colonized will often develop a deep suspicion of these technologies. But when, in Fanon's words, the doctor is `sleeping on the ground with the men and women of the mechatas, living the drama of the people' then, in Gibson's words `lived experience...liberates and transgresses the restrictive physical and mental boundaries of the colonial...order.'

State seeks to mobilize particular nationalist discourses to produce good citizens - citizens who only take what they can afford and are obedient and docile in the face of the systematic and often violent exclusion of the poor from the means to life. Citizens, who, in other words, wait patiently for things to get better while they get worse. The World Bank, and its academics, journalists and NGOs, seek to mobilize a universalizing set of discourses to produce The Poor - a universal category of people
whose material circumstances are a consequence of the venality of other poor people, inefficiencies on the part of the state and the delusion that they are victims of larger structural forces. Overcoming this delusion and developing entrepreneurship and survivalist organizations that offer mutual support are presented as the only grounds for hope. As these ideological pincers close more tightly the courage and imagination recommended by Fanon and very eloquently explored by Nigel Gibson become ever more necessary and generative.

Nigel Gibson has made a superb and accessible contribution to the study of Fanon. There is no better introductory text and this book is also essential reading for the serious Fanon scholar. But don't let that rare achievement fool you into assuming that the rest of the titles in Polity's Key Contemporary Thinkers series are of equal value. Valerie Kennedy's book on Edward Said is miserably and irredeemably stunted. So it goes.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When Frantz Fanon arrived in France in 1947 the nation was in flux; shaken by the war, it now faced radical movements for change, including a new "Third World" struggling for independence, as well as the solidifying of the Cold War into spheres of influence. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
racial gaze, anticolonial violence, radical mutation, fighting culture, human reciprocity, nationalist bourgeoisie, dependency complex, new humanism, revolutionary woman
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Algiers School, North African, Concerning Violence, Algeria Unveiled, White Other, World War Two, Voice of Algeria, West Indians, Abane Ramdane, Ben Bella, Dien Bien Phu, Jean Veneuse, Third World, Algeria's European Minority
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