Hey guys! welcome to chapter two of the Wretched of the Earth! Here is the summary and analysis we will be using for this book, feel free to use this to follow along if you cant complete the reading or need help catching up.
Chapter two is one of my favorites. It paints a wonderful painting of the colonized society and its potential paths and pitfalls to revolution. The key to this chapter is understanding the different players involved in a colonized society and the tensions between each other.
Some (optional) discussion questions:
1.Who is the lumpenproletariat? Why are the essential to a revolution, why is discounting their potential a mistake?
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Who are the urban proletariat? what kind of positions do they have? why do they represent the “bourgeoisie fraction of the colonized population”?
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Who are the rural masses, why are they often a hindrance to revolutions in the past, why are they also crucial? What role do witch doctors and tribal chief play in the lives of the rural masses?
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Where will the political education of the masses come from? Why is it important?
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What is the weakness of spontaneity?
Bonus: Try to tie in the concepts from chapter two to a real life countries, such as the events in Niger or Haiti (who is the lumpenproletariat, what are they doing ect).
feel free to ignore the discussion questions if they dont serve you, and just comment any thought, questions, and critiques you have of the chapter! also due dates are not conducive to a real education people! always go at your own pace you don’t have to comment today.
English translation by Richard Philcox – https://ia801708.us.archive.org/3/items/the-wretched-of-the-earth/The Wretched Of The Earth.pdf – you'd be reading from page 42 to 311 of this PDF, 270 pages
English translation by Constance Farrington – https://abahlali.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Frantz-Fanon-The-Wretched-of-the-Earth-1965.pdf
Original French text – https://monoskop.org/images/9/9d/Fanon_Frantz_Les_damnés_de_la_terre_2002.pdf
English audio version – https://inv.tux.pizza/playlist?list=PLZ_8DduHfUd2r1OOCtKh0M6Q9xD5RaR3S – about 12h20m – Alternative links
soundcloud audio book english https://soundcloud.com/listenleft/sets/frantz-fanon-the-wretched-of-the-earth
Schedule
8/20/23 - pre-face and chapter one On violence
8/27/23- chapter two Grandeur and Weakness of Spontaneity
9/3/23- chapter three The Trials and Tribulations of National Consciousness
9/10/23- chapter four On National Culture
9/17/23 chapter five Colonial war and Mental Disorders and conclusion
Put most elegantly by Fanon: “Tactics are mistaken for strategy.” As previously described with the lumpenproletariat, the spontaneous eruption of resistance within the cities may change the nature of the national struggle as forces of coercion in the form of colonial military forces or colonial police focused on cracking down on dissent in rural districts are forced to retreat to the cities (regions where compradors and colonial administration are centered) to restore the order of colonial rule, yet Fanon states that this is not enough:
“They [leaders of popular revolts] discover that the success of the struggle presupposes clear objectives, a definite methodology and above all the need for the mass of the people to realize that their unorganized efforts can only be a temporary dynamic. You can hold out for three days—maybe even for three months—on the strength of the admixture of sheer resentment contained in the mass of the people; but you won’t win a national war, you’ll never overthrow the terrible enemy machine, and you won’t change human beings if you forget to raise the standard of consciousness of the rank-and-file.” [Emphases mine.]
This gets back to Fanon writing that decolonization is a act that dismantles the material and ideology structures of the colonizers. One cannot rely solely on spontaneous reaction to the atrocities of the colonizing force (though their atrocities are many) to push the colonized into opposing the colonizers, because colonizers has in the past, and will, recruit among the compradors and opportunist lumpenproletariat to tamp down on anti-colonial movements.
Decolonization requires political education of the masses, (“the political education of the masses is seen to be a historic necessity”), of self-critique and improvement on past shortcomings to improve in future programs and decision-making (“The leaders show their power and authority by criticizing mistakes, using every appraisal of past conduct to bring the lesson home, and thus insure fresh conditions for progress,”) and it requires the an organizational framework to facilitate the transmission of shared experiences and understandings, directing mass action, and establish communicative ties of solidarity between colonized people of all backgrounds in opposition to colonialism:
A really great chapter, and while I’d like to answer the other questions, my understanding of every point Fanon is making for this chapter is from cursory reading and I don’t feel confident enough to answer some of the other questions for fear of completely misconstruing the points of the chapter (hopefully I didn’t misconstrue his points or miss context from some of the things I took away from the questions I did answer.) Fanon’s analysis on the lumpenproletariat in a exploited colonial/neocolonial society is really interesting and from some of the theory that I have read, lines up with Mao’s 1926 Analysis of the Classes in Chinese Society as a class of revolutionary potential but with caveats: “Apart from all these, there is the fairly large lumpen-proletariat, made up of peasants who have lost their land and handicraftsmen who cannot get work. They lead the most precarious existence of all. […] One of China’s difficult problems is how to handle these people. Brave fighters but apt to be destructive, they can become a revolutionary force if given proper guidance.” I haven’t read much theory but the analyses of the lumpenproletariats and discussions on their revolutionary potential are always interesting, especially if Mao in the previous quote is like ‘uh we’re still going over our approach with the lumpen, everybody.’
I spent a good bit of time reading the chapters (I missed the ping when this was first posted, sorry Othello) and it kept me way into the night and a bit in the morning so I hope this discussion response wasn’t better in my mind than posted. The analyses of class in any theory always pulls my interest and Fanon’s viewpoint of class structures within the framework of a colonial/neocolonial society is a new perspective to add to my existing understandings of class. Overall a great chapter, but one that I need to read over again (and with an exhaustion-free brain) to fully understand Fanon’s points. Thanks again Othello, looking forward to the discussion for this chapter from others, and with future chapter discussions!
(Apparently Hexbear is not happy with my post in 1 block so I had to split it up into 2 posts)
I am going to give this comment the response it deserves after the hurricane passes tomorrow!
Sure thing friend, please stay safe
so I agree will almost everything you said spot on! I think I originally misread your comment so I went back and reread the whole chapter, only to reread your comment and realized I may have misunderstood you.
just in case, while the lumpenproletariat may come from rural places they are as you noted the “urban spearhead of rebellion”. the lumpenproletariat are in my understanding a subset of the peasant masses who were forced to relocate to cites. Now I think you got this correct in your original statement i was just a bit confused by your phrasing in that one part. “are composed of the dispossessed masses of growing rural populations”
besides that your analysis looks flawless to me, I wish I had more to say but i just kept nodding while reading like
ill be posting mu own thoughts either today or tomorrow as soon as im done cleaning up all these damn branches around my neighbors house.