Frantz Fanon

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What I call middle-class society is any society that becomes rigidified in predetermined forms, forbidding all evolution, all gains, all progress, all discovery. I call middle-class a closed society in which life has no taste, in which the air is tainted, in which ideas and men are corrupt. And I think that a man who takes a stand against this death is in a sense a revolutionary.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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The gaze that the colonized subject casts at the colonist's sector is a look of lust, a look of envy. Dreams of possession. Every type of possession; of sitting at the colonist's table and sleeping in his bed, preferably with his wife. The colonized man is an envious man.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Dream
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The misfortune of the man of color is having been enslaved. The misfortune and inhumanity of the white man are having killed man somewhere.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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Zombies, believe me, are more terrifying than colonists.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Believe
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Hate demands existence, and he who hates has to show his hate in appropriate actions and behaviors; in a sense, he has to become hate. That is why the Americans have substituted discrimination for lynching.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Hate
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To speak...means above all to assume a culture, to support the weight of a civilization.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Mean
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Anti-Semitism hits me on the head: I am enraged, I am bled white by an appalling battle, I am deprived of the possibility of being man. I cannot disassociate myself from the future that is proposed for my brother.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Brother
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Certain things need to be said if one is to avoid falsifying the problem.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Needs
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Today I believe in the possibility of love; that is why I endeavor to trace its imperfections, its perversions.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Believe
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I came into the world imbued with the will to find a meaning in things, my spirit filled with the desire to attain to the source of the world, and then I found that I was an object in the midst of other objects.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Desire
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The living expression of the nation is the collective consciousness in motion of the entire people.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Expression
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No attempt must be made to encase man, for it is his destiny to be set free.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Destiny
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For violence, like Achilles' lance, can heal the wounds it has inflicted.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Violence
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The colonized is elevated above his jungle status in proportion to his adoption of the mother country's cultural standards.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Mother
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The life of the nation is shot through with a certain falseness and hypocrisy, which are all the more tragic because they are so often subconscious rather than deliberate ... The soul of the people is putrescent, and until that becomes regenerate and clean, no good work can be done.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: People
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Colinialism hardly ever exploits the whole of a country. It contents itself with bringing to light the natrual resources, which it extracts, and exports to meet the needs of the mother country's industries, thereby allowing certain sectors of the colony to become relatively rich. But the rest of the colony follows its path of under-development and poverty, or at all events sinks into it more deeply.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Mother
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It is the white man who creates the Negro. But it is the negro who creates negritude.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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I, the man of color, want only this: That the tool never possess the man. That the enslavement of man by man cease forever. That is, of one by another. That it be possible for me to discover and to love man, wherever he may be.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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I feel my soul as vast as the world, truly a soul as deep as the deepest of rivers; my chest has the power to expand to infinity. I was made to give and they prescribe for me the humility of the cripple.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Humility
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When I search for Man in the technique and the style of Europe, I see only a succession of negations of man, and an avalanche of murders.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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Negrophobes exist. It is not hatred of the Negro, however, that motivates them; they lack the courage for that, or they have lost it. Hate is not inborn; it has to be constantly cultivated, to be brought into being, in conflict with more or less recognized guilt complexes. Hate demands existence and he who hates has to show his hate in appropriate actions and behavior; in a sense, he has to become hate. That is why Americans have substituted discrimination for lynching. Each to his own side of the street.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Hate
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Collective guilt is borne by what is conventionally called the scapegoat. Now the scapegoat for white society - which is based on myths of progress, civilization, liberalism, education, enlightenment, refinement - will be precisely the force that opposes the expansion and the triumph of these myths. This brutal opposing force is supplied by the Negro.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Civilization
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Fervor is the weapon of choice for the impotent.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Choices
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Taking the continent as a whole, this religious tension may be responsible for the revival of the commonest racial feeling. Africa is divided into Black and White, and the names that are substituted- Africa south of the Sahara, Africa north of the Sahara- do not manage to hide this latent racism. Here, it is affirmed that White Africa has a thousand-year-old tradition of culture; that she is Mediterranean, that she is a continuation of Europe and that she shares in Graeco-Latin civilization. Black Africa is looked on as a region that is inert, brutal, uncivilized - in a word, savage.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Religious
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I am black: I am the incarnation of a complete fusion with the world, an intuitive understanding of the earth, an abandonment of my ego in the heart of the cosmos, and no white man, no matter how intelligent he may be, can ever understand Louis Armstrong and the music of the Congo.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Heart
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[Educated blacks] Society refuses to consider them genuine Negroes. The Negro is a savage, whereas the student is civilized. "You're us," and if anyone thinks you are a Negro he is mistaken, because you merely look like one.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Thinking
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Introducing someone as a "Negro poet with a University degree" or again, quite simply, the expression, "a great black poet." These ready-made phrases, which seem in a common-sense way to fill a need-or have a hidden subtlety, a permanent rub.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: University Degrees
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For Europe, for ourselves and for humanity, comrades, we must turn over a new leaf, we must work out new concepts, and try to set afoot a new man.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Men
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When a bachelor of philosophy from the Antilles refuses to apply for certification as a teacher on the grounds of his color I say that philosophy has never saved anyone. When someone else strives and strains to prove to me that black men are as intelligent as white men I say that intelligence has never saved anyone: and that is true, for, if philosophy and intelligence are invoked to proclaim the equality of men, they have also been employed to justify the extermination of men.
- Frantz Fanon
Collection: Teacher