Couverture de Black Skin, White Masks

Black Skin, White Masks

Penguin Modern Classics

Aperçu

30 jours d'essai gratuit à Audible Standard

Essayer Standard gratuitement
Choisissez 1 livre audio par mois dans l'ensemble de notre catalogue.
Écoutez les livres audio que vous avez choisis pendant toute la durée de votre abonnement.
Accédez à volonté à des podcasts incontournables.
Gratuit avec l'offre d'essai, ensuite 2,99 €/mois. Possibilité de résilier l'abonnement chaque mois.

Black Skin, White Masks

De : Frantz Fanon, Richard Philcox - translator
Lu par : Theo Solomon
Essayer Standard gratuitement

Renouvellement automatique à 2,99 € mois après 30 jours. Annulation possible chaque mois.

Acheter pour 25,45 €

Acheter pour 25,45 €

À propos de ce contenu audio

Brought to you by Penguin.

Frantz Fanon's urgent, dynamic critique of the effects of racism on the psyche is a landmark study of the black experience in a white world. Drawing on his own life and his work as a psychoanalyst to explore how colonialism's subjects internalize its prejudices, eventually emulating the 'white masks' of their oppressors, it established Fanon as a revolutionary anti-colonialist thinker.

'This century's most compelling theorist of racism and colonialism' Angela Davis

'Fanon is our contemporary ... In clear language, in words that can only have been written in the cool heat of rage, Fanon showed us the internal theatre of racism' Deborah Levy

'So hard to put down ... a brilliant, vivid and hurt mind, walking the thin line that separates effective outrage from despair' The New York Times Book Review

© Frantz Fanon 2021 (P) Penguin Audio 2021

Psychologie Psychologie et interactions sociales Psychologie et psychiatrie Racisme et discrimination Sciences sociales Sociologie Théorie sociale

Commentaires

This century's most compelling theorist of racism and colonialism (Angela Davis)
Fanon is our contemporary because when he psychoanalysed the way the French coloniser looked at Arabs, he is also describing the way the police looked at Stephen Lawrence. In clear language, in words that can only have been written in the cool heat of rage, Fanon showed us the internal theatre of racism, and how some of us have been staged in its psychodrama (Deborah Levy)
A brilliant, vivid and hurt mind, walking the thin line that separates effective outrage from despair. . . He demonstrates how insidiously the problem of race, of color, connects with a whole range of words and images. . . It is Fanon the man, rather than the medical specialist or intellectual, who makes the book so hard to put down (Robert Coles)
Aucun commentaire pour le moment