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K. Marx
The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
K. Anderson (1995)
Lenin, Hegel, and Western Marxism
M. Liebman (1975)
Leninism Under Lenin
F. Fanon (2018)
The Wretched of the EarthPrinceton Readings in Political Thought
Antonio Gramsci (2020)
Selections from the prison notebooksThe Applied Theatre Reader
F. Fanon (1964)
Toward the African RevolutionPower and Inequality
N. Gibson (2003)
Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination
G. Lukács
History and Class Consciousness
Édouard Glissant, J. Dash (1999)
Caribbean Discourse: Selected Essays
Raya Dunayevskaya (1982)
Philosophy and Revolution: From Hegel to Sartre, and from Marx to Mao
Steve Biko (1978)
I Write What I Like
F. Fanon (1952)
Black Skin, White MasksMy Black Stars
M. Neocosmos (2011)
The Nation and Its Politics: Fanon, Emancipatory Nationalism, and Political Sequences
Z. Çelik (1997)
Urban Forms and Colonial Confrontations: Algiers Under French Rule
F. Fanon, H. Chevalier, Adolfo Gilly (1959)
A Dying Colonialism
How can the wretched of the earth become a basis of a new politics? Does Frantz Fanon’s dialectic of organization, only implicit in his writings, and certainly not simply reducible to any particular organization or to direct action, have anything to offer our period of revolts and rebellions? Reflecting on Fanon’s revolutionary commitment and its theoretical articulation in The Wretched of the Earth , this essay reflects on what he calls a new humanism as a philosophical-organizational and practical problematic.
South Atlantic Quarterly – Duke University Press
Published: Dec 21, 2013
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