Black Skin, White Masks

Paperback, 240 pages

English language

Published Nov. 6, 2008 by Grove Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8021-4300-6
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Black Skin, White Masks (French: Peau noire, masques blancs) is a 1952 book by Frantz Fanon, a psychiatrist and intellectual from Martinique. The book is written in the style of autoethnography, in which Fanon shares his own experiences while presenting a historical critique of the effects of racism and dehumanization, inherent in situations of colonial domination, on the human psyche. There is a double process that is economic and internalized through the epidermalization of inferiority. The violent overtones in Fanon can be broken down into two categories: The violence of the colonizer through annihilation of body, psyche, culture, along with the demarcation of space. And secondly the violence of the colonized as an attempt to retrieve dignity, sense of self, and history through anti-colonial struggle.

1 edition

Subjects

  • United States - General
  • History
  • Ethnic Issues
  • History - General History
  • History: American
  • Africa - General
  • Ethnic Studies - African American Studies - General
  • Ethnopsychology
  • History / United States / General
  • Black race
  • Psychology
  • Social conditions