Download A Macat Analysis of Frantz Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks AudioBook Free
Frantz Fanon's Black colored Skin, White Masks offers a radical analysis of the mental health effects of colonization on the colonized. Born in 1925 on the island of Martinique - at the time a French colony - Fanon witnessed firsthand the abuses of white colonizers and the system's effects on his country. His revulsion was only confirmed later in life when he worked well as a psychiatrist in Algeria, another French colony. Black Skin, White Masks was written in 1952 when Fanon was just 27 years of age. The text of his first reserve is uncompromising, both in form and in argument. It dissects the dehumanizing effects of colonialism by linking socio-economic and mental health analysis of the predicament of colonized people, and demonstrating the top role of the literary imagination in talking about and challenging its effects. Fanon's work performed a pivotal role in the civil protection under the law actions of the 1960s and was later adopted by scholars of postcolonialist studies, a self-control that examines the ethnic, political, and mental health legacies of colonialism.