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Fanon's central claim (Black Skin, White Masks)?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.4
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10.4.18 cards
Fanon's central claim (Black Skin, White Masks)?
Colonialism's deepest damage is psychological — it gets inside the mind and teaches the colonized to feel inferior.
The 'inferiority complex' of the colonized?
A deep, taught feeling of being worth less than others, installed by colonial society.
How does the inferiority get planted?
A whole society ranks the colonizer's language, skin and culture as superior, and the colonized absorb this from birth.
Whose fault is the inferiority, for Fanon?
The colonial system's, not the person's — it's installed from outside, an injury to heal, not a flaw to blame.
Why does Fanon being a psychiatrist matter?
He treats the inferiority as a real injury to a real mind — meant literally, to be understood and healed.
Fanon's shift of question?
Not just 'who rules the land?' but 'what has colonial rule done to the person's own sense of who they are?'
Why can't you fix it just by 'feeling proud'?
A whole system keeps teaching the opposite; the cause must be named and changed, not just willed away.
The colonized mind in one line?
A mind colonial society has taught to see itself as inferior.
10.4.28 cards
Fanon on what a language carries?
A whole world — its values and its ranking of people; taking it on is never just learning words.
Why is the colonizer's language a 'route to acceptance'?
Colonial society ranks people by how 'well' they speak it, so mastering it seems to promise being accepted as an equal.
Alienation (Fanon)?
Being cut off from your own community and from your true self, through chasing acceptance in the colonizer's terms.
The two-way split of alienation?
From your community (you speak 'above' them) and from yourself (straining to be someone you're not).
Why is the acceptance 'false'?
You leave yourself behind to earn it, yet are still kept at the margin — the ladder never reaches the top.
The double bind of the colonizer's language?
Refuse it and you're locked out; master it and you're alienated and still not let in — either way you lose.
Is language a neutral tool, for Fanon?
No — it's a world you enter, so speaking the colonizer's language reshapes how you see people, including yourself.
Language and power in one line?
The colonizer's language promises belonging with one hand and takes away the self with the other.
10.4.38 cards
The 'white mask' (Fanon's title)?
The colonizer's ways the colonized are pressured to wear over their own self, to be accepted — it hides the real person.
The 'racialising gaze'?
A look that reduces a person to a racial object, defined from outside — seeing skin loaded with the colonizer's fears, not a self.
Fanon's street scene ('Look — a Negro')?
A frightened child fixes him as a feared object; he is looked at as a thing, not seen as a person.
Why does the gaze steal freedom?
It decides your identity from outside before you speak, treating you as a type rather than a self.
The deepest harm of the gaze?
The outside look becomes an inside voice — the colonized begin to see themselves through the colonizer's eyes.
How does the gaze lead to the mask?
Once you see yourself as the gaze sees you, hiding behind the colonizer's ways feels like the only way to be worth something.
Fanon vs Sartre on the 'Look'?
Sartre's Look is neutral and two-way; Fanon's racialising gaze is loaded with society's ranking and lands one-sidedly on the colonized.
The title as argument, in one line?
A gaze fixes you from outside, becomes an inside voice, and the white mask feels like the only way to belong.
10.4.48 cards
What does 'evaluate' (Paper 2 part b) ask for?
Test the reasoning of a claim — weigh reasons for and against — and reach a reasoned judgement.
Why is imitating the colonizer NOT liberation?
A better mask is still a mask — it keeps the colonizer's ranking in place and the colonized still judged by someone else's standard.
Mutual recognition (Fanon)?
Two people meeting as equals, each seeing the other as a free self — which breaks the object-fixing gaze.
A 'new humanism' (Fanon)?
A shared human world where no one is ranked above another by race, and each person is free to define themselves.
How does Fanon's cure fit his diagnosis?
The wound was being defined from outside; the freedom is being seen as a self — recognition is the exact reverse of the gaze.
The main objection to mutual recognition?
The colonizer holds the power and may never grant it, so recognition can look like a hope, not a plan.
How is Paper 2 examined?
Open-book, one hour: a two-part question on your text — (a) Explain a concept [10] + (b) Evaluate a claim [15].
Fanon's argument in one line?
Name the wound (mind, language, mask, gaze), refuse the false cure (imitation), build mutual recognition and a new humanism.
Topic 10.4 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Black Skin, White Masks — Fanon
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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