 | Elie Kedourie - 1974 - 592 páginas
...land was created by us"; he is the unceasing cause: "If we leave, all is lost, and the country will go back to the Middle Ages." Over against him torpid...because he constantly refers to the history of his mother-country, he clearly indicates that he himself is the extension of that mother-country. Thus... | |
 | Aggrey Brown - 200 páginas
...may well have been Martian.4s My own school experience in Jamaica confirms Fanon's assertion that: the settler makes history and is conscious of making...indicates that he himself is the extension of that mother-country. Thus the history which he writes is not the history of the country which he plunders.... | |
 | Aggrey Brown - 200 páginas
...may well have been Martian.48 My own school experience in Jamaica confirms Fanon's assertion that: the settler makes history and is conscious of making...indicates that he himself is the extension of that mother-country. Thus the history which he writes is not the history of the country which he plunders,... | |
 | Ella Shohat, Robert Stam - 1994 - 438 páginas
...the imperial vision, in which "the settler makes history; his life is an epoch, an Odyssey," while against him "torpid creatures, wasted by fevers, obsessed...background for the innovating dynamism of colonial mercantilism."5 A crucial innovation of The Battle of Algiers was to invert the Eurocentric focalizations... | |
 | Alastair Pennycook - 1998 - 264 páginas
...land was created by us'; he is the unceasing cause: 'If we leave, all is lost, and the country will go back to the Middle Ages.' Over against him torpid...the innovating dynamism of colonial mercantilism. . . . Thus the history which he writes is not the history of the country which he plunders but the... | |
 | Neil Lazarus - 1999 - 316 páginas
...Jand was created by us"; he is the unceasing cause: "If we leave, all is lost, and the country will go back to the middle ages." Over against him torpid...the innovating dynamism of colonial mercantilism. (Wretched, p. 51) In addressing himself to "native" culture, therefore, Fanon is not addressing himself... | |
 | Ella Shohat, Robert Stam - 2003 - 356 páginas
...writes in Wretched of the Earth, "the settler makes history; his life is an epoch, an Odyssey," while against him "torpid creatures, wasted by fevers, obsessed...the innovating dynamism of colonial mercantilism" (Fanon, 1963, p. 51). Here Fanon anticipates Johannes Fabian's critique of classical anthropology's... | |
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