Franz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth

A Revolutionary Analysis of Fanon’s Vision

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Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth is nothing short of a revolutionary manifesto, a brilliant dissection of the colonial system and a call to arms for the oppressed. His analysis is a powerful critique of colonialism, not just as a political and economic system, but as a deeply entrenched cultural and psychological structure. Fanon doesn’t simply theorize the revolution—he embodies it in words, taking us through the structural violence of colonialism and showing us how this violence becomes the basis for liberation. Let’s dive into the key themes of his work and uncover the genius of his thought.




1. The Role of Violence in Colonialism: A Double-Edged Sword

For Fanon, violence isn’t a mere tactic—it is the essence of both the colonial system and the decolonizing struggle. He argues that colonialism is built upon brute force, established through a continuous application of "bayonets and cannons." The colonial project is not about "peaceful domination" but about reducing the native to a sub-human status. The settler’s violence is necessary to maintain this degradation because, paradoxically, the more they exploit the native, the more they must strip him of his humanity to prevent rebellion.

However, Fanon flips this understanding when he discusses decolonization. For the colonized, violence becomes a cleansing force. It isn’t simply a reaction but a transformative act that is essential to reclaim humanity. The oppressed must rise against their oppressors, and in this act of resistance, they rebuild their self-respect and sense of dignity. Violence becomes the key to unifying disparate ethnic groups, breaking the chains of tribalism, and forging a collective national consciousness. For Fanon, violence is not just the means of liberation—it is the condition for a new, unified nation.


2. Manichaeism and the Colonial World: The Black-and-White Division

Fanon employs the concept of Manichaeism—a dualistic worldview where everything is divided into absolute opposites—to describe the colonial situation. The settler’s world, on one side, and the native’s world, on the other, are starkly opposed and mutually exclusive. In this binary division, there is no room for negotiation or reconciliation.

The settler sees the native as the absolute evil, the embodiment of everything "corrupt" and "depraved." He dehumanizes the colonized people through brutal stereotypes, comparing them to animals and insects. For the settler, the native is the "enemy" who must be eradicated to maintain the colonial order.

But Fanon also reveals a mirror image of this worldview. The colonized, subjected to the settler’s racist violence, internalize their dehumanization and flip it—creating a reversed Manichaeism. The settler, once the symbol of power, becomes the "absolute evil," the object of hate. The struggle for freedom thus becomes a fight to destroy the colonizer’s body and, by extension, the entire colonial system.


3. The Infrastructure and Superstructure: A Marxist Revolution in the Colony

One of Fanon’s most revolutionary insights is his application of Marxism to colonial society. In traditional Marxist theory, the economic "infrastructure" (the means of production) determines the "superstructure" (culture, politics, and ideology). However, Fanon argues that in the colonial context, this division is irrelevant. The economic and ideological systems are not separate—they are entangled.

In the colony, race is the central organizing principle. The white settler is rich because he is white, and the native is poor because he is native. There is no abstract inequality hidden beneath the surface; it is immediate, visible, and concrete. The racial divide is not merely a social construct—it is a material reality, manifest in segregated living conditions, unequal labor, and systemic violence. The physical and ideological structures of colonialism are inseparable, creating a totalitarian reality where the native is trapped in a system that dehumanizes them at every level.


4. The Racialization of Culture: A Dangerous Trap

One of the most fascinating aspects of Fanon’s critique is his analysis of the intellectual responses to colonialism, particularly the tendency to romanticize pre-colonial culture. In the wake of colonial violence, there is often a retreat into a "racialized" vision of the past—an attempt to reclaim a lost, "pure" culture. However, Fanon warns that this return to tradition can be counterproductive. The intellectual's desire to defend the pre-colonial past risks turning culture into something static, something substantial rather than dynamic.

For Fanon, true culture is not a relic of the past; it is the culture of the revolution. It is the culture that is born from struggle, constantly evolving as the people fight for their freedom. Racializing culture, therefore, is a trap that distracts from the real task at hand—the liberation of the people and the creation of a new society. Culture is not about preserving what was, but about inventing what could be.


5. The National Bourgeoisie: The Parasitic Class

Fanon is highly critical of the national bourgeoisie, the class of educated elites who take control after the formal independence of a colony. He refers to them as a "sham"—a class created by the colonial power to serve as intermediaries. These bourgeois elites are "useless" because they lack the vision and the capacity to genuinely transform society. They do not create—they manage the remnants of the colonial economy, often becoming pawns in a new form of neo-colonialism.

This "uselessness" leads to political instability and often a dictatorship, as the national bourgeoisie relies on military and police power to protect their wealth and maintain order. In many cases, they end up serving the interests of the former colonizer, perpetuating the cycle of exploitation.


6. Decolonization and the Global Capitalist System: A Global Shift

Fanon is acutely aware that decolonization is not just a local or national issue—it is a global event that shakes the very foundations of the capitalist world system. When colonies gain independence, they remove their labor and resources from the global market, depriving the former colonizers of critical resources. This loss destabilizes the economies of the imperialist powers, leading to factory closures, unemployment, and social unrest.

This crisis, Fanon argues, has revolutionary potential. It forces the European working class to confront its own system of exploitation and opens the door for solidarity between the oppressed colonized peoples and the European proletariat. This is not just a struggle for independence; it is a struggle for the future of humanity.


7. Culture and Combat: Forging a New National Identity

Fanon emphasizes the inseparable link between the fight for freedom and the creation of a new national culture. Colonialism systematically destroys cultural identity, but in the heat of combat, a new culture is forged. The revolution itself becomes the culture of the revolution—it is born out of struggle, shaped by collective action, and guided by a common cause.

This cultural renaissance transcends old ethnic divisions, erasing tribalism and regionalism. Combat unites the people in their fight for liberation, and in this unity, a new national culture is created, one that reflects the aspirations of the people rather than the imposed values of the colonizer.


8. The Wretched of the Earth: A Call to Action 

The title of Fanon’s book, The Wretched of the Earth, is a direct reference to the opening line of the socialist anthem "The Internationale": "Arise, ye wretched of the Earth." This title is not just a description of the colonized—it is a call to action. The "wretched" are the most oppressed, the lumpenproletariat, and the marginalized peasants. They are the true revolutionary agents, capable of dismantling the colonial structure and ushering in a new world.

In this title, Fanon elevates the struggle of the colonized to the level of a universal class struggle against imperialism and capitalism. It is a call for the oppressed to rise up, to reject their "damned" status, and to fulfill their historical mission—not just to achieve national liberation, but to create a new, more just world order.


Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth is as relevant today as it was in the 1960s. It is a powerful indictment of colonialism and a passionate call for revolutionary change. Through violence, culture, and combat, Fanon shows us that liberation is not merely a political act—it is a radical transformation of society, identity, and humanity itself. This book is not just for students of history or political theory; it is for anyone who believes in justice, freedom, and the possibility of a new world.

Reference 

Rhys, Jean. Wide Sargasso Sea. W. W. Norton & Company, 1999.

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