![]() It’s also in a new translation by Richard Philcox. ![]() ![]() ![]() That edition has Sartre’s original introduction, plus a new foreword by the Indian scholar Homi K. The Wretched of the Earth was republished in paperback in 2004. Like the names Marx and Engels, or Malcolm X and Alex Haley-the Black journalist who wrote Malcolm’s autobiography, and whose name is on the cover of Malcolm’s book-Fanon and Sartre have been linked in the pages of revolutionary history and legend for the last six decades. Published 60 years ago in 1961 The Wretched of the Earth was one of the seminal works of the Sixties, in part because it came with an introduction by the French philosopher, novelist and Third World defender Jean-Paul Sartre. We will be free, by any means necessary.” That was the cry I heard everywhere, “By any means necessary.” That meant violence if need be. We will use that violence to rid ourselves of oppression if necessary. Americans taught the black people to be violent. He elaborated, “Violence is a part of America’s culture. Near the peak of the Black Power movement, Brown Americanized Fanon and gave him an African-American inflection. Fanon laid the groundwork for Rap in his 1961 book, The Wretched of the Earth, which inspired members of SNCC, plus Black Panthers, Weathermen and more. He was in a hurry and cities were burning. Rap Brown didn’t credit Frantz Fanon in his famed 1967 speech on violence, though he might have. ![]() Photograph Source: Tony Webster – CC BY 2.0 ![]()
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