Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth and How it Applies to the Iraq War

James Kerley
Frantz Fanon's revolutionary work, The Wretched of the Earth, was written as a study of north African post-colonialism. Yet the theories Fanon laid out in Wretched continue to reveal themselves as accurate. By applying some of Fanon's theories concerning nationalism and the role of literature in a post-colonial state to the current situation in Iraq, it's easy to see that Fanon is still getting it right - 40 some odd years after his death.

It's not hard to see how modern Iraq is the product of a history of Western colonialism, stemming from the British capture of Baghdad from the Ottoman Empire in 1917. A false nation was created, one that encompassed peoples with potentially volatile differences in culture and religion. Saddam Hussein came to rule over a country comprised of people with no clear national consciousness. Because of this national ambiguity and because of Hussein's own ethnic background as Sunni Arab (which various sources have cited as comprising less than one fourth of Iraq's population), he was in essence still carrying out the colonialist institution of a foreign ruler. When Saddam Hussein was dethroned and the colonial economy he occupied crumbled, the fragile unity that existed in Iraq was unmasked. Fanon's analysis of African post-colonialism is eerily relevant: "unity takes off the mask, and crumbles into regionalism inside the hollow shell of nationality itself." (1583) Tensions that had existed before Hussein among Kurds, Shiites, Sunnis, and Sufis (among others) resurfaced almost immediately. Fanon's words are again prophetic: "Inside a single nation, religion splits up people into different spiritual communities, all of them kept up and stiffened by colonialism and its instruments." (1584) This spiritual regionalism seen by Fanon in northern Africa is now prevalent in modern day Iraq, evidenced by the massive outbreak of insurgent violence.

For three years, the U.S. has been attempting to institute an Iraqi parliament. This government has passed legislation and held free elections, yet the country is still entrenched in regionalism and violence. This may be because Iraq is attempting to adopt a model based on Western ideology - a model which loses meaning in the middle-east as it is an empty replica of the original. Nationalism must grow from the Iraqi people themselves for any semblance of a stable state to exist.

I am by no means an expert on the literature of Iraq, but through the lens of Fanon's work it seems that literature may play an integral role in the success of the region. Fanon argues that under post-colonialism there will be a progression in literature which mirrors the progression of nationalism: "In fact, the progress of national consciousness among the people modifies and gives precision to the literary utterances of the native intellectual." (1589) It remains to be seen if a "literature of combat" (1589) will be created in Iraq's new nationalism, but it seems that if Fanon is right - and he usually is - a close analysis of the literature coming out of Iraq in the years to come will be necessary to accurately and organically provide methods of peace and stability within the region

Work Cited

Fanon, Frantz. From The Wretched of the Earth. The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. Ed. Vincent B. Leitch. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2001. 1575-1593.

Published by James Kerley

Part of the Yahoo! Contributor Network team. I'm your best contact for sports related questions. I grew up in New Mexico before moving to Colorado for school. I love weird and experimental writing an...  View profile

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  • AC_James9/12/2008

    Thanks for reading and commenting! Franz Fanon was a brilliant, brilliant mind, and he died far too young (in his mid-late 30s I believe). It's very dense and complex, but fascinating.

  • P. B. Chase9/11/2008

    Wow, that is a very interesting concept. I think that there is always a reflection of any historic event echoed in the literature of the people affected by said event. As it is the true voice of the people and not the dialogue of the news makers of the day it seems that the journey could very much depend on the voices of those who know and can speak to the hearts of the people in a way that unites them to the cause. Of course not all voices coming out of the region will be positive or uniting, but I believe the prevailing voice will be. I don't know anything about Fanon's work, but you have piqued my interest.

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