The Wretched of the Earth

by

Frantz Fanon

The practice of taking full or partial control of a country for the purposes of establishing a colony of settlers and economically exploiting the indigenous people, land, and resources. Colonialism as a practice began during the 15th century, and it still exists in some parts of the world today. By the early 1900s, Europe had control of 84 percent of the world through colonialism.

Colonialism Quotes in The Wretched of the Earth

The The Wretched of the Earth quotes below are all either spoken by Colonialism or refer to Colonialism. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1: On Violence Quotes

Decolonization, therefore, implies the urgent need to thoroughly challenge the colonial situation. Its definition can, if we want to describe it accurately, be summed up in the well-known words: “The last shall be first.” Decolonization is verification of this. At a descriptive level, therefore, any decolonization is a success.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 2
Explanation and Analysis:

In its bare reality, decolonization reeks of red-hot cannonballs and bloody knives. For the last can be the first only after a murderous and decisive confrontation between the two protagonists. This determination to have the last move up to the front, to have them clamber up (too quickly, say some) the famous echelons of an organized society, can only succeed by resorting to every means, including, of course, violence.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 3
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1: Violence in International Context Quotes

And when we hear the head of a European nation declare with hand on heart that he must come to the aid of the unfortunate peoples of the underdeveloped world, we do not tremble with gratitude. On the contrary, we say among ourselves, “it is a just reparation we are getting.” So we will not accept aid for the underdeveloped countries as “charity.” Such aid must be considered the final stage of a dual consciousness—the consciousness of the colonized that it is their due and the consciousness of the capitalist powers that effectively they must pay up.

Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:

It is clear therefore that the young nations of the Third World are wrong to grovel at the feet of the capitalist countries. We are powerful in our own right and the justness of our position. It is our duty, however, to tell and explain to the capitalist countries that they are wrong to think the fundamental issue of our time is the war between the socialist regime and them.

Page Number: 61
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2: Grandeur and Weakness of Spontaneity Quotes

The great mistake, the inherent flaw of most of the political parties in the underdeveloped regions has been traditionally to address first and foremost the most politically conscious elements: the urban proletariat, the small tradesmen and the civil servants, i.e., a tiny section of the population which represents barely more than one percent.

Related Characters: The National Bourgeoisie, The Peasant Masses, The Urban Proletariat
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

The struggle for national liberation is not a question of bridging the gap in one giant stride. The epic is played out on a difficult, day-to-day basis and the suffering endured far exceeds that of the colonial period.

Related Characters: The Colonized
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:

The people who in the early days of the struggle had adopted the primitive Manichaeanism of the colonizer—Black versus White, Arab versus Infidel—realize en route that some blacks can be whiter than the whites, and that the prospect of a national flag or independence does not automatically result in certain segments of the population giving up their privileges and their interests.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3: The Trials and Tribulations... Quotes

Since the bourgeoisie has neither the material means nor adequate intellectual resources such as engineers and technicians, it limits its claims to the takeover of businesses and firms previously held by the colonists. The national bourgeoisie replaces the former European settlers as doctors, lawyers, tradesmen, agents, dealers, and shipping agents. For the dignity of the country and to safeguard its own interests, it considers it its duty to occupy all these positions. Henceforth it demands that every major foreign company must operate through them, if it wants to remain in the country or establish trade.

Related Characters: The Colonists/Colonialists, The National Bourgeoisie, The Urban Proletariat
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:

A country which really wants to answer to history, which wants to develop its towns and the minds of its inhabitants, must possess a genuine party. The party is not an instrument in the hands of the government. Very much to the contrary, the party is an instrument in the hands of the people. It is the party which decides on the policy enacted by the government. The party is not and never should be merely a political bureau where all the members of government and dignitaries of the regime feel free to congregate. Alas all too often it is the party which makes up the entire political bureau and its members reside permanently in the capital. In an underdeveloped country the leading party members should flee the capital like the plague. With the exception of a few, they should reside in the rural areas. Centralizing everything in the capital should he avoided. No administrative pretext can justify the bustle of the capital already overpopulated and overdeveloped compared with nine tenths of the territory. The party must be decentralized to the limit.

Page Number: 127-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: On National Culture Quotes

Within the political parties, or rather parallel to them, we find the cultured class of colonized intellectuals. The recognition of a national culture and its right to exist represent their favorite stamping ground. Whereas the politicians integrate their action in the present, the intellectuals place themselves in the context of history. Faced with the colonized intellectual’s debunking of the colonialist theory of a precolonial barbarism, colonialism’s response is mute.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 147
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: Mutual Foundations... Quotes

National culture under colonial domination is a culture under interrogation whose destruction is sought systematically. Very quickly it becomes a culture condemned to clandestinity. This notion of clandestinity can immediately be perceived in the reactions of the occupier who interprets this complacent attachment to traditions as a sign of loyalty to the national spirit and a refusal to submit. This persistence of cultural expression condemned by colonial society is already a demonstration of nationhood.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 171-1
Explanation and Analysis:

A culture is first and foremost the expression of a nation, its preferences, its taboos, and its models. Other taboos, other values, other models are formed at every level of the entire society. National culture is the sum of all these considerations, the outcome of tensions internal and external to society as a whole and its multiple layers. In the colonial context, culture, when deprived of the twin supports of the nation and the state, perishes and dies. National liberation and the resurrection of the state are the preconditions for the very existence of a culture.

Page Number: 177
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Colonial War and Mental Disorders Quotes

When colonization remains unchallenged by armed resistance, when the sum of harmful stimulants exceeds a certain threshold, the colonized’s defenses collapse, and many of them end up in psychiatric institutions. In the calm of this period of triumphant colonization, a constant and considerable stream of mental symptoms are direct sequels of this oppression.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Series A Quotes

Today I can tell just which stage the interrogation has reached by the sound of the screams. The guy who has been punched twice and given a blow behind the ear has a certain way of talking, screaming, and saying that he is innocent. After he has been hanging by his wrists for two hours, his voice changes. After the bathtub, a different voice. And so on. But it’s after the electricity that it becomes unbearable. You’d think he was going to die at any moment.

Related Characters: A (speaker), The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:
Conclusion Quotes

We must abandon our dreams and say farewell to our old beliefs and former friendships. Let us not lose time in useless laments or sickening mimicry. Let us leave this Europe which never stops talking of man yet massacres him at every one of its street corners, at every corner of the world.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Page Number: 235
Explanation and Analysis:

Let us decide not to imitate Europe and let us tense our muscles and our brains in a new direction. Let us endeavor to invent a man in full, something which Europe has been incapable of achieving.

Two centuries ago, a former European colony took it into its head to catch up with Europe. It has been so successful that the United States of America has become a monster where the flaws, sickness, and inhumanity of Europe have reached frightening proportions.

Related Characters: The Colonized, The Colonists/Colonialists
Related Symbols: Tense Muscles
Page Number: 236
Explanation and Analysis:
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Colonialism Term Timeline in The Wretched of the Earth

The timeline below shows where the term Colonialism appears in The Wretched of the Earth. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1: On Violence
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
Decolonization—the liberation of a nation and the restoration of that nation to the people—will, according to... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
During decolonization, Fanon writes, whenever the colonized begin to resist the colonists and rise up, they are... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
During decolonization, many colonized intellectuals have modified the demand that the last become the first and have... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...is false. Comradery and brotherhood are forbidden by the colonialist bourgeoisie for a reason: during decolonization, the colonized intellectual will find power in the people and the notion of meetings and... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...masses do not recognize colonialist bourgeoisie thought. The colonized intellectual easily forgets the purpose of decolonization—to defeat colonialism—and they forget the main question fueling it: “Bread and land: how do we... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
The Manichaeanism of colonial society is left intact during decolonization, only the colonists are the evil ones. The colonized are “penned in” by colonial society,... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...deep possession—organized séances that include stories of vampirism and zombies—but these rituals are lost during decolonization.   (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...and business elite that nonviolence is in everyone’s best interest, but nonviolence is ineffective in decolonization. Colonialism “is naked violence,” Fanon says, and it “only gives in when confronted with greater... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Capitalism, Socialism, and the Third World Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
When colonization began, one military power could occupy large stretches of land, but the struggle of the... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
...colonized, Fanon says, this violence is an armed conflict, and it can break out wherever colonialism is practiced. An armed struggle means that the colonized have put their faith in violence... (full context)
Chapter 1: On Violence in the International Context
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Capitalism, Socialism, and the Third World Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
Political leaders of underdeveloped countries expect their people to fight colonialism, poverty, and other devastating conditions, and these newly independent countries have to both contend with... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Capitalism, Socialism, and the Third World Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...colonized become economically dependent on the same colonists who occupied them. The conflict that was colonialism versus anticolonialism has now turned into capitalism versus socialism. (full context)
Chapter 2: Grandeur and Weakness of Spontaneity
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
Colonialism has historically found ways in which to use the lumpenproletariat. Any national liberation movement, Fanon... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...the colonial power. Strength and rich reserves are needed, Fanon says, because “the reserves of colonialism are far richer and more substantial than of those of the colonized.” (full context)
Chapter 3: The Trials and Tribulations of National Consciousness
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...and they work capitalism and economics to their own best interest, creating a system of neocolonialism. At a psychological level, the national bourgeoisie identifies more with the Western bourgeoisie than with... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
Soon after independence, the national bourgeoisie, having struggled against the racism of colonialism, call for the jobs of white lawyers, doctors, and landowners, claiming that such white workers... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...nation, and this leads to a return to tribalism and the rise of ethnic tensions. Colonialism, Fanon argues, does not exploit an entire nation. It focuses its efforts in urban areas... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...surface as well, and the two major religions—Islam and Catholicism—begin to clash. Now, Fanon claims, colonialism is “back on its feet,” as it “shamelessly pulls all these strings” and keeps a... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Capitalism, Socialism, and the Third World Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...Fanon says, the peasant masses aren’t able to assess how far they have come since colonialism. Their lives are much the same as they have always been—impoverished and hungry—and there has... (full context)
Chapter 4: On National Culture
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
The mission of underdeveloped countries has been to resist colonialism and clear the path for new struggles. In a post-colonial world, the colonized have fought... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...trapped in Western culture, so they return to the time that is furthest away from colonialism. They are unable to come to terms with the oppression of recent history, so they... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
Colonialism was not content to merely exploit and abuse the people, the colonial power stripped the... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...on a “continental scale.” The past is brought back, but not the cultural past. Under colonialism, the continent of Africa is seen as a “den of savages” that is cursed, evil,... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...cultures of Senegal and Guinea, other than that they are controlled by the same French colonialism. Two identical cultures do not exist. The creation of a unifying black culture forgets that... (full context)
Chapter 4: Mutual Foundations for National Culture and Liberation Struggles
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Culture and the Emerging Nation  Theme Icon
...a long and detailed list of their indigenous culture and defend it. National culture under colonialism is “a culture under interrogation whose destruction is sought systematically.” (full context)
Chapter 5: Colonial War and Mental Disorders
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
...involves psychiatry case files. “There is absolutely nothing we can do about that,” Fanon says. Colonialism is “a great purveyor of psychiatric hospitals.” As it sought to completely negate the humanity... (full context)
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
When colonialism exists without armed rebellion, and the violence and oppression hit a specific limit, “the colonized’s... (full context)
Chapter 5: From the North African’s Criminal Impulsiveness to the War of National Liberation
Colonialism, Racism, and Violence Theme Icon
Oppression and Mental Health Theme Icon
Decolonization, Neocolonialism, and Social Class Theme Icon
...to say that the colonial context allows Algerian criminality a chance to be reexamined. Under colonialism, the Algerians were exposed to daily murder, famine, and abuse, and, as a result, had... (full context)