Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies

Building on the theoretical interventions provided in "Red Skin, White Masks," Glen Coulthard's presentation will interrogate the reception and application of psychiatrist-turned-anti-colonial-revolutionary Frantz Fanon's theoretical work in Canadian political thought and activis...

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Main Author: Coulthard, Glen
Format: Moving Image (Video)
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/20128
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:20128 2023-05-15T16:17:09+02:00 Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies Coulthard, Glen 2017-09-25 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/20128 English eng http://summit.sfu.ca/item/20128 Video 2017 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:43:08Z Building on the theoretical interventions provided in "Red Skin, White Masks," Glen Coulthard's presentation will interrogate the reception and application of psychiatrist-turned-anti-colonial-revolutionary Frantz Fanon's theoretical work in Canadian political thought and activism from the 1960s to the present. Fanon's theoretical influence in the United States has been well noted. The profound mark that Fanon in particular and Third Worldism in general left on post-war US anti-colonial radicalism led cultural theorist Stuart Hall to declare Wretched of the Earth nothing less than "The Bible of Decolonization." Interestingly, however, Fanon's influence is perhaps even more pronounced in Canada. For example, Quebecois sovereigntists in the 1960s often borrowed the language of Fanonian anti-colonialism in their own struggles for national recognition, while largely ignoring both Fanon's insights into the problem of recognition in colonial contexts and Quebec's own problematic status as a settler-society complicit in the attempted genocide and dispossession of Indigenous peoples in the province. Fanon's work was also used by high-level federalists like Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau to critique Quebecois nationalism and by multiculturalists like Charles Taylor to chart a conciliatory path between both the claims of Quebec and Canada's concerns about national unity. And, of course, truer to form, Fanon was also an inspiration to both Black nationalists and "Fourth World" Indigenous nations in our respective struggles against displacement and dispossession by the provincial and federal governments. In reconstructing this historical narrative Coulthard aims to re-situate Indigenous decolonization within the global anti-colonial imaginary that once radically informed our struggles for land, freedom and dignity. SPEAKER BIO Glen Coulthard is Yellowknives Dene and an associate professor in the First Nations and Indigenous Studies Program and the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial Politics of Recognition (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2014), winner of the 2016 Caribbean Philosophical Association's Frantz Fanon Award for Outstanding Book, the Canadian Political Science Association's CB Macpherson Award for Best Book in Political Theory, published in English or French, in 2014/2015, and the Rik Davidson Studies in Political Economy Award for Best Book in 2016. Moving Image (Video) First Nations Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Canada Davidson ENVELOPE(-44.766,-44.766,-60.766,-60.766) Elliot ENVELOPE(166.533,166.533,-70.883,-70.883) Macpherson ENVELOPE(155.833,155.833,-82.483,-82.483)
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description Building on the theoretical interventions provided in "Red Skin, White Masks," Glen Coulthard's presentation will interrogate the reception and application of psychiatrist-turned-anti-colonial-revolutionary Frantz Fanon's theoretical work in Canadian political thought and activism from the 1960s to the present. Fanon's theoretical influence in the United States has been well noted. The profound mark that Fanon in particular and Third Worldism in general left on post-war US anti-colonial radicalism led cultural theorist Stuart Hall to declare Wretched of the Earth nothing less than "The Bible of Decolonization." Interestingly, however, Fanon's influence is perhaps even more pronounced in Canada. For example, Quebecois sovereigntists in the 1960s often borrowed the language of Fanonian anti-colonialism in their own struggles for national recognition, while largely ignoring both Fanon's insights into the problem of recognition in colonial contexts and Quebec's own problematic status as a settler-society complicit in the attempted genocide and dispossession of Indigenous peoples in the province. Fanon's work was also used by high-level federalists like Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau to critique Quebecois nationalism and by multiculturalists like Charles Taylor to chart a conciliatory path between both the claims of Quebec and Canada's concerns about national unity. And, of course, truer to form, Fanon was also an inspiration to both Black nationalists and "Fourth World" Indigenous nations in our respective struggles against displacement and dispossession by the provincial and federal governments. In reconstructing this historical narrative Coulthard aims to re-situate Indigenous decolonization within the global anti-colonial imaginary that once radically informed our struggles for land, freedom and dignity. SPEAKER BIO Glen Coulthard is Yellowknives Dene and an associate professor in the First Nations and Indigenous Studies Program and the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial Politics of Recognition (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2014), winner of the 2016 Caribbean Philosophical Association's Frantz Fanon Award for Outstanding Book, the Canadian Political Science Association's CB Macpherson Award for Best Book in Political Theory, published in English or French, in 2014/2015, and the Rik Davidson Studies in Political Economy Award for Best Book in 2016.
format Moving Image (Video)
author Coulthard, Glen
spellingShingle Coulthard, Glen
Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
author_facet Coulthard, Glen
author_sort Coulthard, Glen
title Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
title_short Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
title_full Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
title_fullStr Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
title_full_unstemmed Glen Coulthard: Fanonian Antinomies
title_sort glen coulthard: fanonian antinomies
publishDate 2017
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/20128
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