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Fanon, Temporality and Pedagogy: Combatting Racist (Non-)Relationalities of Self and Other

Authors :
Erica Burman
Source :
Educational Philosophy and Theory. 2024 56(14):1378-1390.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This article addresses relations between concepts of 'self', 'other(s)' and 'othering' through a reading of the revolutionary psychiatrist Frantz Fanon's psychoaffective phenomenological and pedagogical narrative approach, reading his work as phenomenological and educational as well as critiquing phenomenology, psychology, education and (of course) psychiatry. While most--especially educational--commentators base their engagement with Fanon's revolutionary materialist phenomenology of racialised embodiment and consciousness on his first book, "Black Skin White Masks" and attend to his final book, "Wretched of the Earth" as expressing his core political and philosophical analyses, this article focuses in particular on Fanon's second and middle book, "A Dying Colonialism," evaluating the political possibilities of the specific narrative temporalities elaborated there. Notwithstanding its rather dismissive reception, it is argued that this, middle, book--written during, and as a document of, the Algerian liberation struggle--expresses and develops Fanon's psychopolitical and performative philosophy of subjective and objective transformation from alienation to emancipation. This philosophy works pedagogically, in imagining the transformation of relations between others, as well as between self and others, including relations between coloniser and colonized, as also between and within selves.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0013-1857 and 1469-5812
Volume :
56
Issue :
14
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Educational Philosophy and Theory
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1451650
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2024.2395337