Speech by Frantz Fanon at the Congress of Black African Writers, 1959
Wretched of the Earth
Reciprocal Bases of National Culture and the Fight for Freedom
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Source: Reproduced from Wretched of the Earth (1959) publ. Pelican.
Speech to Congress of Black African Writers.
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Colonial domination, because it is total and tends to over-simplify,
very soon manages to disrupt in spectacular fashion the cultural life
of a conquered people. This cultural obliteration is made possible by
the negation of national reality, by new legal relations introduced by
the occupying power, by the banishment of the natives and their customs
to outlying districts by colonial society, by expropriation, and by the
systematic enslaving of men and women.
Three years ago at our first congress I showed that, in the colonial
situation, dynamism is replaced fairly quickly by a substantification
of the attitudes of the colonising power. The area of culture is then
marked off by fences and signposts. These are in fact so many defence
mechanisms of the most elementary type, comparable for more than one
good reason to the simple instinct for preservation. The interest of
this period for us is that the oppressor does not manage to convince
himself of the objective non-existence of the oppressed nation and its
culture. Every effort is made to bring the colonised person to admit
the inferiority of his culture which has been transformed into
instinctive patterns of behaviour, to recognise the unreality of his
'nation', and, in the last extreme, the confused and imperfect
character of his own biological structure.
Vis-à-vis this state of affairs, the native's reactions are not
unanimous While the mass of the people maintain intact traditions which
are completely different from those of the colonial situation, and the
artisan style solidifies into a formalism which is more and more
stereotyped, the intellectual throws himself in frenzied fashion into
the frantic acquisition of the culture of the occupying power and takes
every opportunity of unfavourably criticising his own national culture,
or else takes refuge in setting out and substantiating the claims of
that culture in a way that is passionate but rapidly becomes
unproductive.
The common nature of these two reactions lies in the fact that they
both lead to impossible contradictions. Whether a turncoat or a
substantialist the native is ineffectual precisely because the analysis
of the colonial situation is not carried out on strict lines. The
colonial situation calls a halt to national culture in almost every
field. Within the framework of colonial domination there is not and
there will never be such phenomena as new cultural departures or
changes in the national culture. Here and there valiant attempts are
sometimes made to reanimate the cultural dynamic and to give fresh
impulses to its themes, its forms and its tonalities. The immediate,
palpable and obvious interest of such leaps ahead is nil. But if we
follow up the consequences to the very end we see that preparations are
being thus made to brush the cobwebs off national consciousness to
question oppression and to open up the struggle for freedom.
A national culture under colonial domination is a contested culture
whose destruction is sought in systematic fashion. It very quickly
becomes a culture condemned to secrecy. This idea of clandestine
culture is immediately seen in the reactions of the occupying power
which interprets attachment to traditions as faithfulness to the spirit
of the nation and as a refusal to submit. This persistence in following
forms of culture which are already condemned to extinction is already a
demonstration of nationality; but it is a demonstration which is a
throw-back to the laws of inertia. There is no taking of the offensive
and no redefining of relationships. There is simply a concentration on
a hard core of culture which is becoming more and more shrivelled up,
inert and empty.
By the time a century or two of exploitation has passed there comes
about a veritable emaciation of the stock of national culture. It
becomes a set of automatic habits, some traditions of dress and a few
broken-down institutions. Little movement can be discerned in such
remnants of culture; there is no real creativity and no overflowing
life. The poverty of the people, national oppression and the inhibition
of culture are one and the same thing. After a century of colonial
domination we find a culture which is rigid in the extreme, or rather
what we find are the dregs of culture, its mineral strata. The
withering away of the reality of the nation and the death-pangs of the
national culture are linked to each other in mutual dependences. This
is why it is of capital importance to follow the evolution of these
relations during the struggle for national freedom. The negation of the
native's culture, the contempt for any manifestation of culture whether
active or emotional and the placing outside the pale of all specialised
branches of organisation contribute to breed aggressive patterns of
conduct in the native. But these patterns of conduct are of the
reflexive type; they are poorly differentiated, anarchic and
ineffective. Colonial exploitation, poverty and endemic famine drive
the native more and more to open, organised revolt. The necessity for
an open and decisive breach is formed progressively and imperceptibly,
and comes to be felt by the great majority of the people. Those
tensions which hitherto were non-existent come into being.
International events, the collapse of whole sections of colonial
empires and the contradictions inherent in the colonial system
strengthen and uphold the native's combativity while promoting and
giving support to national consciousness.
These new-found tensions which are present at all stages in the real
nature of colonialism have their repercussions on the cultural plane.
In literature, for example, there is relative over-production. From
being a reply on a minor scale to the dominating power, the literature
produced by natives becomes differentiated and makes itself into a will
to particularism. The intelligentsia, which during the period of
repression was essentially a consuming public, now themselves become
producers. This literature at first chooses to confine itself to the
tragic and poetic style; but later on novels, short stories and essays
are attempted. It is as if a kind of internal organisation or law of
expression existed which wills that poetic expression become less
frequent in proportion as the objectives and the methods of the
struggle for liberation become more precise. Themes are completely
altered; in fact, we find less and less of bitter, hopeless
recrimination and less also of that violent, resounding, florid writing
which on the whole serves to reassure the occupying power. The
colonialists have in former times encouraged these modes of expression
and made their existence possible. Stinging denunciations, the exposing
of distressing conditions and passions which find their outlet in
expression are in fact assimilated by the occupying power in a
cathartic process. To aid such processes is in a certain sense to avoid
their dramatisation and to clear the atmosphere. But such a situation
can only be transitory. In fact, the progress of national consciousness
among the people modifies and gives precision to the literary
utterances of the native intellectual. The continued cohesion of the
people constitutes for the intellectual an invitation to go farther
than his cry of protest. The lament first makes the indictment; then it
makes an appeal. In the period that follows, the words of command are
heard. The crystallisation of the national consciousness will both
disrupt literary styles and themes, and also create a completely new
public. While at the beginning the native intellectual used to produce
his work to be read exclusively by the oppressor, whether with the
intention of charming him or of denouncing him through ethnical or
subjectivist means, now the native writer progressively takes on the
habit of addressing his own people.
It is only from that moment that we can speak of a national
literature. Here there is, at the level of literary creation, the
taking up and clarification of themes which are typically nationalist.
This may be properly called a literature of combat, in the sense that
it calls on the whole people to fight for their existence as a nation.
It is a literature of combat, because it moulds the national
consciousness, giving it form and contours and flinging open before it
new and boundless horizons; it is a literature of combat because it
assumes responsibility, and because it is the will to liberty expressed
in terms of time and space.
On another level, the oral tradition - stories, epics and songs of the
people - which formerly were filed away as set pieces are now beginning
to change. The storytellers who used to relate inert episodes now bring
them alive and introduce into them modifications which are increasingly
fundamental. There is a tendency to bring conflicts up to date and to
modernise the kinds of struggle which the stories evoke, together with
the names of heroes and the types of weapons. The method of allusion is
more and more widely used. The formula 'This all happened long ago' is
substituted by that of 'What we are going to speak of happened
somewhere else, but it might well have happened here today, and it
might happen tomorrow'. The example of Algeria is significant in this
context. From 1952-3 on, the storytellers, who were before that time
stereotyped and tedious to listen to, completely overturned their
traditional methods of storytelling and the contents of their tales.
Their public, which was formerly scattered, became compact. The epic,
with its typified categories, reappeared; it became an authentic form
of entertainment which took on once more a cultural value. Colonialism
made no mistake when from 1955 on it proceeded to arrest these
storytellers systematically.
The contact of the people with the new movement gives rise to a new
rhythm of life and to forgotten muscular tensions, and develops the
imagination. Every time the storyteller relates a fresh episode to his
public, he presides over a real invocation. The existence of a new type
of man is revealed to the public. The present is no longer turned in
upon itself but spread out for all to see. The storyteller once more
gives free rein to his imagination; he makes innovations and he creates
a work of art. It even happens that the characters, which are barely
ready for such a transformation - highway robbers or more or less
antisocial vagabonds - are taken up and remodelled. The emergence of
the imagination and of the creative urge in the songs and epic stories
of a colonised country is worth following. The storyteller replies to
the expectant people by successive approximations, and makes his way,
apparently alone but in fact helped on by his public, towards the
seeking out of new patterns, that is to say national patterns. Comedy
and farce disappear, or lose their attraction. As for dramatisation, it
is no longer placed on the plane of the troubled intellectual and his
tormented conscience. By losing its characteristics of despair and
revolt, the drama becomes part of the common lot of the people and
forms part of an action in preparation or already in progress.
Where handicrafts are concerned, the forms of expression which
formerly were the dregs of art, surviving as if in a daze, now begin to
reach out. Woodwork, for .example, which formerly turned out certain
faces and attitudes by the million, begins to be differentiated. The
inexpressive or overwrought mask comes to life and the arms tend to be
raised from the body as if to sketch an action. Compositions containing
two, three or five figures appear. The traditional schools are led on
to creative efforts by the rising avalanche of amateurs or of critics.
This new vigour in this sector of cultural life very often passes
unseen; and yet its contribution to the national effort is of capital
importance. By carving figures and faces which are full of life, and by
taking as his theme a group fixed on the same pedestal, the artist
invites participation in an organised movement.
If we study the repercussions of the awakening of national
consciousness in the domains of ceramics and pottery-making, the same
observations may be drawn. Formalism is abandoned in the craftsman's
work. Jugs, jars and trays are modified, at first imperceptibly, then
almost savagely. The colours, of which formerly there were but few and
which obeyed the traditional rules of harmony, increase in number and
are influenced by the repercussion of the rising revolution. Certain
ochres and blues, which seemed forbidden to all eternity in a given
cultural area, now assert themselves without giving rise to scandal. In
the same way the stylisation of the human face, which according to
sociologists is typical of very clearly defined regions, becomes
suddenly completely relative. The specialist coming from the home
country and the ethnologist are quick to note these changes. On the
whole such changes are condemned in the name of a rigid code of
artistic style and of a cultural life which grows up at the heart of
the colonial system. The colonialist specialists do not recognise these
new forms and rush to the help of the traditions of the indigenous
society. It is the colonialists who become the defenders of the native
style. We remember perfectly, and the example took on a certain measure
of importance since the real nature of colonialism was not involved,
the reactions of the white jazz specialists when after the Second World
War new styles such as the be-bop took definite shape. The fact is that
in their eyes jazz should only be the despairing, broken-down nostalgia
of an old Negro who is trapped between five glasses of whisky, the
curse of his race, and the racial hatred of the white men. As soon as
the Negro comes to an understanding of himself, and understands the
rest of the world differently, when he gives birth to hope and forces
back the racist universe, it is clear that his trumpet sounds more
clearly and his voice less hoarsely. The new fashions in jazz are not
simply born of economic competition. We must without any doubt see in
them one of the consequences of the defeat, slow but sure, of the
southern world of the United States. And it is not utopian to suppose
that in fifty years' time the type of jazz howl hiccupped by a poor
misfortunate Negro will be upheld only by the whites who believe in it
as an expression of nigger-hood, and who are faithful to this arrested
image of a type of relationship.
We might in the same way seek and find in dancing, singing, and
traditional rites and ceremonies the same upward-springing trend, and
make out the same changes and the same impatience in this field. Well
before the political or fighting phase of the national movement an
attentive spectator can thus feel and see the manifestation of new
vigour and feel the approaching conflict. He will note unusual forms of
expression and themes which are fresh and imbued with a power which is
no longer that of invocation but rather of the assembling of the
people, a summoning together for a precise purpose. Everything works
together to awaken the native's sensibility and to make unreal and
inacceptable the contemplative attitude, or the acceptance of defeat.
The native rebuilds his perceptions because he renews the purpose and
dynamism of the craftsmen, of dancing and music and of literature and
the oral tradition. His world comes to lose its accursed character. The
conditions necessary for the inevitable conflict are brought together.
We have noted the appearance of the movement in cultural forms and we
have seen that this movement and these new forms are linked to the
state of maturity of the national consciousness. Now, this movement
tends more and more to express itself objectively, in institutions.
From thence comes the need for a national existence, whatever the
cost.
A frequent mistake, and one which is moreover hardly justifiable is to
try to find cultural expressions for and to give new values to native
culture within the framework of colonial domination. This is why we
arrive at a proposition which at first sight seems paradoxical: the
fact that in a colonised country the most elementary, most savage and
the most undifferentiated nationalism is the most fervent and efficient
means of defending national culture. For culture is first the
expression of a nation, the expression of its preferences, of its
taboos and of its patterns. It is at every stage of the whole of
society that other taboos, values and patterns are formed. A national
culture is the sum total of all these appraisals; it is the result of
internal and external extensions exerted over society as a whole and
also at every level of that society. In the colonial situation,
culture, which is doubly deprived of the support of the nation and of
the state, falls away and dies. The condition for its existence is
therefore national liberation and the renaissance of the state.
The nation is not only the condition of culture, its fruitfulness, its
continuous renewal, and its deepening. It is also a necessity. It is
the fight for national existence which sets culture moving and opens to
it the doors of creation. Later on it is the nation which will ensure
the conditions and framework necessary to culture. The nation gathers
together the various indispensable elements necessary for the creation
of a culture, those elements which alone can give it credibility,
validity, life and creative power. In the same way it is its national
character that will make such a culture open to other cultures and
which will enable it to influence and permeate other cultures. A non-
existent culture can hardly be expected to have bearing on reality, or
to influence reality. The first necessity is the re-establishment of
the nation in order to give life to national culture in the strictly
biological sense of the phrase.
Thus we have followed the break-up of the old strata of culture, a
shattering which becomes increasingly fundamental; and we have noticed,
on the eve of the decisive conflict for national freedom, the renewing
of forms of expression and the rebirth of the imagination. There
remains one essential question: what are the relations between the
struggle - whether political or military - and culture? Is there a
suspension of culture during the conflict? Is the national struggle an
expression of a culture? Finally, ought one to say that the battle for
freedom, however fertile a posteriori with regard to culture, is in
itself a negation of culture? In short is the struggle for liberation a
cultural phenomenon or not?
We believe that the conscious and organised undertaking by a colonised
people to re-establish the sovereignty of that nation constitutes the
most complete and obvious cultural manifestation that exists. It is not
alone the success of the struggle which afterwards gives validity and
vigour to culture; culture is not put into cold storage during the
conflict. The struggle itself in its development and in its internal
progression sends culture along different paths and traces out entirely
new ones for it. The struggle for freedom does not give back to the
national culture its former value and shapes; this struggle which aims
at a fundamentally different set of relations between men cannot leave
intact either the form or the content of the people's culture. After
the conflict there is not only the disappearance of colonialism but
also the disappearance of the colonised man.
This new humanity cannot do otherwise than define a new humanism both
for itself and for others. It is prefigured in the objectives and
methods of the conflict. A struggle which mobilises all classes of the
people and which expresses their aims and their impatience, which is
not afraid to count almost exclusively on the people's support, will of
necessity triumph. The value of this type of conflict is that it
supplies the maximum of conditions necessary for the development and
aims of culture. After national freedom has been obtained in these
conditions, there is no such painful cultural indecision which is found
in certain countries which are newly independent, because the nation by
its manner of coming into being and in the terms of its existence
exerts a fundamental influence over culture. A nation which is born of
the people's concerted action and which embodies the real aspirations
of the people while changing the state cannot exist save in the
expression of exceptionally rich forms of culture.
The natives who are anxious for the culture of their country and who
wish to give to it a universal dimension ought not therefore to place
their confidence in the single principle of inevitable,
undifferentiated independence written into the consciousness of the
people in order to achieve their task. The liberation of the nation is
one thing; the methods and popular content of the fight are another. It
seems to me that the future of national culture and its riches are
equally also part and parcel of the values which have ordained the
struggle for freedom.
And now it is time to denounce certain pharisees. National claims, it
is here and there stated, are a phase that humanity has left behind. It
is the day of great concerted actions, and retarded nationalists ought
in consequence to set their mistakes aright. We, however, consider that
the mistake, which may have very serious consequences, lies in wishing
to skip the national period. If culture is the expression of national
consciousness, I will not hesitate to affirm that in the case with
which we are dealing it is the national consciousness which is the most
elaborate form of culture.
The consciousness of self is not the closing of a door to
communication. Philosophic thought teaches us, on the contrary, that it
is its guarantee. National consciousness, which is not nationalism, is
the only thing that will give us an international dimension. This
problem of national consciousness and of national culture takes on in
Africa a special dimension. The birth of national consciousness in
Africa has a strictly contemporaneous connexion with the African
consciousness. The responsibility of the African as regards national
culture is also a responsibility with regard to African-Negro culture.
This joint responsibility is not the fact of a metaphysical principle
but the awareness of a simple rule which wills that every independent
nation in an Africa where colonialism is still entrenched is an
encircled nation, a nation which is fragile and in permanent danger.
If man is known by his acts, then we will say that the most urgent
thing today for the intellectual is to build up his nation. If this
building up is true, that is to say if it interprets the manifest will
of the people and reveals the eager African peoples, then the building
of a nation is of necessity accompanied by the discovery and
encouragement of universalising values. Far from keeping aloof from
other nations, therefore, it is national liberation which leads the
nation to play its part on the stage of history. It is at the heart of
national consciousness that international consciousness lives and
grows. And this two-fold emerging is ultimately the source of all
culture.
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