30 July 2013

Fanon and Cabral - Xicano Resistance Literature



 
         


   Examining the theoretical foundation of literature written by Chicana/o community intellectuals could lead to an understanding of why Chicana/o resistance literature in the past and present situates itself within the overall struggle of third world liberation movements across the globe. Frantz Fanon, the Martinique born anti colonial writer, psychologist and liberation theorist outlines the stages of literary development within an emerging national culture after centuries of military and economic domination. Writing resistance to colonial oppression for Fanon is inextricably linked with physical resistance, which is inextricably linked with the material conditions of the oppressed. Fanon writes that when the native knows “he is not an animal”[i] (it is at this moment of understanding or epiphany resistance is born, that “he realizes his humanity [and] begins to sharpen the weapons with which he will secure its victory”[ii] Fanon continues later by giving intellectual body and substance to this process of struggle sharpening tools both physical and rhetorically when he writes concerning the national struggle,
In the first phase, the native intellectual gives proof that he has assimilated the culture of the occupying powers. His writings correspond point by point with those of his opposite number in the mother country…In the second phase we find the native is disturbed; he decides to remember what he is … sometimes this literature of just-before-the-battle is dominated by humor and by allegory; but often too it is symptomatic of a period of distress and difficulty … Finally, in the third phase, which is called the fighting phases, the native, after having tried to lose himself in the people and with the people, will on the contrary shake the people. Instead of according the people’s lethargy an honored place in his esteem, he turns himself into an awakener of the people; hence comes a fighting literature, a revolutionary literature, and a national literature.[iii]

Fanon describes the suspicion this allegiance to a long conqueror culture arouses within the “occupying power, which interprets attachment to traditions as faithfulness to the spirit of the nation and as a refusal to submit,”[iv] in other words the seed of national liberation. The same attitudes are prominent in Anglo and Chicana/o relations today as charges of slow assimilation are levied against third even fourth generation Mexican Americans.[v] Over 40 years after Fanon observations during the Algerian/Franco conflict, Samuel P. Huntington[vi], past chairman of the Havard Academy of International and Area Studies and author of the 2004 Foreign Policy article “The Hispanic Challenge”, documents U.S. Anglo recognition of this lingering memory of U.S. historical thievery when he compares the Southwest of the United States to other irredentist[vii] movements across the globe writing “History shows that serious potential for conflict exists when people in one country begin referring to territory in a neighboring country in proprietary terms and to assert special rights and claims to that territory.”[viii]
            The downward spiral toward the complete elimination of a people’s original culture is inevitable in a colonial setting. All around us we see the impact of 500 years of genocide and cultural devastation. Fanon is clear on the status of culture among oppressed colonized peoples. His words set the stage for long-term political action on the part of the native against the hegemony of colonial domination
The native intellectual who decides to give battle to colonial lies fights on the field of the whole continent. The past is given back its value. Culture, extracted from the past to be displayed in all its splendor, is not necessarily that of his own country… For colonialism, this vast continent was the haunt of savages, a country riddled with superstitions and fanaticism, destined for contempt, weighed down by the curse of God.[ix]
            Fanon, who trained as a psychologist in France[x], understood and documented the mental dilemmas facing colonized Third World people during their occupation. Many scholars and liberationist since the publishing of his work to the present regards his critique of the mental and physical circumstances endured by the colonized under an occupying colonial government to be as critical and pertinent today as then. Fanon removes the onus of maintaining personal legitimacy through culture off the colonized by demonstrating how the slowly and inevitably declining indigenous culture is inescapably replaced by a colonial culture, century after century, until it becomes obvious the original “national culture under colonial domination is a contested culture whose destruction is sought in a systematic fashion”[xi] so much so, Fanon writes, that in the end before the emergence of the national liberation movement all that is left for the natives is  “simply a concentration on a hard core of culture which is becoming more and more shriveled up, inert and empty.”[xii]
            Amilicar Cabral[xiii] the Papua New Guinea liberationist as the keynote speaker for the Eduardo Mondlane Speech at Syracuse University on October 14, 1970 in a speech titled “National Liberation and Culture” said in part, “the national liberation of a people is the regaining of the historical personality of that people, it is a return to history through the destruction of the imperialist domination to which they have been subjected” (Cabral, p. 7). Like all soldiers/scholars of third world national liberation struggles Cabral understood the actual return to history (cultural reawakening through a national liberation struggle) is subjective in that each national liberation struggle along with the strategies to victory are by necessity unique to the country where the struggle originates. This does not mean however, that lessons cannot be learned or shouldn’t be taken from other national liberation struggles.  
            By examining the histories of colonial struggles around the world we see that material conditions play a major role in both the decisions of the oppressed and the reaction of the oppressor in this return to history. The material, social and cultural conditions created by colonialism allow limited avenues of response to the oppressed. In terms of how this return to history is accomplished it is vital to understand that every revolutionary situation is different because according to Mao “war in any country is waged in the special environment of that country and it has special circumstances and characteristics.”[xiv] It stands to reason though any “return to history” is prefigured by a departure from history – for purposes of our discussion we will call this departure “colonialism” and focus on the process of return – known as the national liberation struggle.
            The history of the Chicana/o has been for the past 162 years the history of the United States, plenty of time to experience the inability of liberal democracy in the U.S. to fulfill its promise of citizenship guaranteed in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The failure to included Chicana/os in full citizenship rhetorically and in political practice along with increasingly stark power differentials in terms of socio-economic status within a colonial framework are vital in placing Chicana/o resistance literature as a first step toward Cabral’s “return to history.”
            It is vital to understand that for Cabral the national liberation struggle, which at is base is a cultureal/material production and is inextricably linked with a “return to history” are consequences of each other. In the case of Chicana/os the history being created is an Indigenist history. Indigenist history is defined as an evolving liberation history, the making of a set of events that is unfolding; history that is happening as an emerging vision written by an emerging people. Ward Churchill helps us to frame the Indigenist outlook when he writes about his definition of the word indigenist,
By this, I mean that I am one that not only takes the rights of indigenous peoples as the highest priority of my political life, but who draws upon the traditions – the bodies of knowledge and corresponding codes of values – evolved over many thousands of years by native peoples the world over.[xv]

            It is also important to understand that the process of national liberation, the physical and intellectual freeing of a people from colonial domination, is by necessity a long one shrouded many times in secrecy. For any cultural movement when this return to history begins is difficult to pinpoint and perhaps unnecessary since it evident through an examination of national liberation struggles there are usually multiple players working independent of each other for long periods of time. This is only one reason why the examination of resistance literature is so vital. Action spring from dialogue; without true dialogue, education and organization there can be no struggle. Without struggle there is no national culture, struggle for the oppressed being the material production of history or as Cabral writes “because it is history, culture has as its material base the level of the productive forces and the mode of production.”[xvi] The material foundation of struggle in terms of the production of culture and the will to resist is vital to understanding of how revolutionary culture is formed and revolutionary history is written.
            At what point does Chicana/o resistance literature abandon the imposed modernizing project of western civilization to return to its own process of collective history? Whose literature speaks to the future or to the past? Whose is obsessed with reexamining history or building toward a new history? It is important to understand that Cabals’ return to history is not a wish to return to the conditions that existed before the European arrived. Cabral’s and Fanon’s desire is that as a distinct people the colonized will emerge from a culturally obscure position to a position of authority on their land by reclaiming and rebuilding a national culture apart from the colonizer.


[i] Fanon, Frantz. (1961) “Wretched of the Earth” p. 43
[ii] Fanon, p. 43
[iii] Fanon, p. 222-223
[iv] Fanon,   p. 237
[v] Huntington, Samuel. “The Hispanic Challenge” p.  6-8
[vi] (deceased)
[vii] The Encarata World English Dictionary defines the word irredentist as “a member of a group of people who support the return to their country of territories that used to belong to it but are now under foreign rule.”
“Harry Beran has argued that the consent model leaves ample room for a right to secede from those states to which no consent was given. The idea here is that if each individual enjoys complete dominion regarding herself, then only her consent is sufficient to determine her membership in a political union. Beran writes, “Liberal democratic theory is committed to the permissibility of secession quite independently of its desirability in order to increase the possibility of consent-based political authority. The claim is this: if persons have a right to personal and political self-determination, then secession must be permitted if it is effectively desired by a territorially concentrated group and if it is morally and practically possible.” Thus Beran concludes that the consent theory of political legitimacy entails that individuals have a moral right to emigrate and change their nationality and that “any territorially concentrated group within a state should be permitted to secede if it wants to and it is morally and practically possible”
[viii] Huntington, Samuel. “The Hispanic Challenge” p. 5
[ix] Fanon, Frantz. (1961) “Wretched of the Earth” p. 211
[x] Gibson, Nigel. Ed. (1999) “Rethinking Fanon: The Continuing Dialogue” Humanity Books, Amherst, NY. P. 60-68
[xi] Fanon, Frantz. (1961) “Wretched of the Earth” p. 237
[xii] Ibid. p. 238
[xiii] Cabral was the Secretary General of the Partido Africana do Independencia de Guiné e Cabo Verde. He was assassinated January 20, 1973.
[xiv] Mao Tse Tung “Laws of war”
[xv] Churchill “Struggle for the Land” p. 403
[xvi] (Cabral, p. 5).  This point is particularly salient for Chicana/os in terms of production since Chicana/os do not have widespread ownership of the means of material production. They do have, however, and are engaged in the widespread production of culture. Meanwhile, it's becoming clear to me that that one of the most complex and compelling axes you want to grind is to defend cultural nationalism against that which has supplanted it: mestizaje (we're all mixed and therefore, finally, all the same), and multiculturalism (we agree that we're all different and that we all like each other's differences).

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