

Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press. Being apart: Theoretical and existential resistance in Africana literature. What Fanon said: A philosophical introduction to his life and thought. London: Rowman & Littlefield International. Frantz Fanon: Écrits sur l’aliénation et la liberté (J. Pour la revolution africaine: écrits politiques. Toward the African revolution (political essays) (H. Sociologie d’une révolution: (L’an V de la révolution algérienne) (2me ed.). The souls of black folk: Essays and sketches. In his short lifetime, he produced two enduring books: Black Skin. Psychology, the psychological, and critical praxis: A phenomenologist reads Frantz Fanon. 1961)psychiatrist, political theorist, poet, polemicist, diplomat, journalist, soldier, doctor, playwright, revolutionaryis one of the foremost writers of the 20th century on the topics of racism, colonialism, and decolonization.

En este artculo veremos qu es la disonancia cognitiva segn Festinger, y sus implicaciones para nuestras vidas. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.ĭesai, M. El psiclogo Leon Festinger propuso la teora de la disonancia cognitiva, que explica cmo las personas intentan mantener la consistencia interna de sus creencias y de las ideas que han interiorizado. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities International Press.Ĭherki, A. Structuralism: The art of the intelligible.

Frantz Fanon and the psychology of oppression. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.īulhan, H. These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. For Fanon, Black consciousness is the psychological manifestation of liberatory self-actualization the psychic movement away from the reductive, racial designation of ‘the black,’ to the self-affirming identification of ‘the Black,’ an actional agent catalyzing revolutionary socio-political change. This sociogenic analysis and decolonial method provides a critical foundation for Fanon’s clinical and theoretical innovations. Fanon’s, Black Skin, White Masks refutes Euromodern psychiatric formulations of the Black as innately diseased and, instead, reveals the socially generated phenomenon of anti-black racism as the root of the Black’s perceived mental illness. This chapter provides a theoretical analysis of Frantz Fanon’s psychiatric, philosophical, and revolutionary thought as a clinical practitioner, polemicist, and soldier dedicated to nurturing, individual and collective self-emancipatory praxis among the colonized peoples of the Global South.
