![]() In this chapter, he goes further in discussing the great variety of psychological disturbances the colonized can experience, and he also discusses how colonialism psychologically damages the colonists, too.įanon begins with a general and more theoretical discussion of possible sources of psychological disturbance. He also talked about how colonialism represses men’s “muscular power,” their violent desire for freedom. Fanon foreshadowed this line of inquiry in Chapter 1, where he argues that the colonist creates the identities of colonist and colonized, and in turn instills in the colonized an entire subjectivity of submission and inferiority. ![]() ![]() ![]() In this final chapter, Fanon turns to the psychology of colonialism-more specifically, the kinds of psychological disorder colonialism produces. ![]()
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