試す 金 - 無料
What would Fanon say about Gaza? Kenan Malik
The Observer
|July 27, 2025
“Every brother on the rooftop can quote Fanon,” the Black Panthers’ Eldridge Cleaver once claimed.
In the 1960s, Frantz Fanon, the Caribbean-born Algerian revolutionary, was a hero of Black Power and national liberation movements, drawn as they were to his excoriation of colonialism. By the 1980s, Fanon had become an icon of postcolonial theory, lauded as a critic of the Enlightenment and a progenitor of identity politics. Today, as Gaza is laid to waste, some have seized on Fanon to justify the Hamas slaughter of 7 October 2023.
Ever since his untimely death from leukaemia in 1961, Fanon has been turned into a mythic figure, emblematic of various causes, admired and loathed in equal measure. Yet Fanon was a far more conflicted and allusive thinker than the myth suggests. This month marks the centenary of Fanon's birth, an apposite moment at which to reassess his legacy.
Born in the French colony of Martinique, Fanon joined the Free French forces in 1943 as a teenager. Believing that "freedom is indivisible", he wanted to enlist in the global fight against racism and fascism. What he discovered was a French army that itself was constructed as a racial hierarchy. As it crossed into Germany, Fanon's regiment was "whitened" by the removal of all African soldiers. He had been "deluded", he wrote angrily to his parents. Fanon, though, never abandoned his belief in the indivisibility of freedom; only, he now recognised that those who most proclaimed their fidelity to freedom often also viewed it as the privilege of a few.
このストーリーは、The Observer の July 27, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Observer からのその他のストーリー
The Observer
'If you spend a lot of time with another creature, you sense another world'
The H is for Hawk author takes Tim Adams to the frosty Cambridgeshire fields where Mabel the goshawk became a spiritual guide through bereavement and the inspiration for an award-winning memoir
7 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
Time for Europe to find the courage to face new realities
“Europe will be forged in crises, and will be the sum of the solutions adopted for those crises.”
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
The democratic world has never cared about Taiwan. The sentiment is now mutual
Many in the west are shocked by the Trump administration's seizure of Venezuela's president, Nicolás Maduro, and there is no shortage of commentators asserting that the US president has given China a green light to invade Taiwan.
3 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
We are in crisis – ban social media for under-16s
Safeguards for children are vital before more harm is done, write former home secretary Amber Rudd and chief constable Simon Bailey
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
Now wrath is becoming the language of American justice
Pete Hegseth, the US secretary of war, on Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan president: \"He fucked around and he found out.\"
4 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
Pensioners have been cushioned for too long – it's time for Labour to get off the sofa on welfare
Ending the triple lock would be a high-risk move. But there is a dividend for clarity and honesty in politics
4 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
The US has torn up the rulebook. But international laws might yet halt the rampage
Trump's actions might have set global precedents. But he could find unexpected obstacles in his path
6 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
It's lights out for Nato if Uncle Sam leaves the building
On Monday Mette Frederiksen, the Danish prime minister, warned that any US attempt to annex Greenland would mean the end of Nato.
3 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
Adder
To brumate, perchance to dream. The winter is long up here on the edge of the Arctic Circle and the only way to survive is a nine-month sleep.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Observer
Canadians now ask the unimaginable: how do we respond to a US attack?
Most of us have had the experience of seeing an old friend or relation go weird, perhaps trying to appear younger or cooler than they really are or hanging out in louche bars.
3 mins
January 11, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
