Frantz Fanon (1925–1961) was a Martinican psychiatrist, philosopher, and revolutionary. Born in Fort-de-France, he studied medicine and psychiatry in France, practiced in Algeria during the war of independence, and joined the Algerian National Liberation Front. He died of leukemia at 36, leaving behind a body of work that remains central to decolonial thought, critical race theory, and postcolonial philosophy.

Core ideas

  • Colonialism as ontological violence: Fanon argued that colonialism does not merely exploit the colonized economically or dominate them politically — it constitutes them as non-human. The colonial world is a Manichaean world: it divides humanity into zones of being and non-being. The colonized subject is produced through this division, not as a person with reduced rights but as a category of being defined by its exclusion from humanity. This is ontological violence — violence directed at the being of the colonized, not just their bodies or resources.
  • Sociogeny: in Black Skin, White Masks (cite: Fanon, 1952), Fanon introduced sociogeny — the study of how social structures produce psychological life — as a complement to phylogeny and ontogeny. The psyche of the colonized subject is not damaged by colonialism; it is produced by it. Racialization is not something that happens to a pre-existing subject but the process through which the subject is constituted.
  • The lived experience of Blackness: Fanon’s account of being fixed by the white gaze — “Look, a Negro!” — describes the experience of being constituted as an object in someone else’s world. The Black person under colonialism does not have a body; they are made into a body by the colonial gaze. This phenomenological analysis grounds Fanon’s politics: liberation is not the granting of rights within existing structures but the destruction of the structures that produce racialized being.
  • Revolutionary violence: in The Wretched of the Earth (cite: Fanon, 1963), Fanon argued that decolonization is the creation of new human beings — not reform but rupture. The colonial structure cannot be negotiated with because it is constitutive: it produces the categories (colonizer/colonized, human/non-human) within which negotiation would take place. Violence in this context is not instrumental but constitutive — it is the process through which the colonized reclaim their capacity for self-determination.

Notable works

  • Black Skin, White Masks (1952)
  • A Dying Colonialism (1959)
  • The Wretched of the Earth (1961) (cite: Fanon, 1963)
Fanon, F. (1952). Black Skin, White Masks. Éditions du Seuil.
Fanon, F. (1963). The Wretched of the Earth. Grove Press.