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Toward the African revolution : political essays

Frantz Fanon, Haakon Chevalier (Translator), François Maspero (Writer of introduction)
"The political essays, articles, and notes by Frantz Fanon published in the present volume cover the most active period of his life, from the publication of Peau Noir, Masques Blancs [Black skin, white masks] in 1952 - he was then twenty-eight years old - to that of Les Damnés de la Terra [The wretched of the earth] in 1961 which was to coincide, within a matter of days, with the date of his death."--Editorial note
Print Book, English, 1967
Grove Press, New York, 1967
History
x, 197 pages ; 21 cm
9780802130907, 0802130909
950451351
pt. 1. The problem of the colonized. The "North African syndrome"
West Indians and Africans
pt. 2. Racism and culture
pt. 3. For Algeria. Letter to a Frenchman
Letter to a resident minister (1956)
pt. 4. Toward the liberation of Africa. Disappointments and illusions of French colonialism
Algeria face to face with the French torturers
Concerning a plea
French intellectuals and Democrats and the Algerian revoution
Maghreb blood shall not flow in vain
The farce that changes sides
Decolonization and independence
A continued crisis
Letter to the youth of Africa
First truths on the colonial problem
The lesson of Cotonou
Appeal to Africans
Sequels of a plebiscite in Africa
The Algerian war and man's liberation
Algeria in Accra
Accra: Africa affirms its unity and defines its strategy
Mr. Debré's desperate endeavors
Racist fury in France
Blood flows in the Antilles under French domination
Unity and effective solidarity are the conditions for African liberation
pt. 5. African unity. This Africa to come
Lumumba's death: could we do otherwise?
Originally published in French: 1964
Translation of: Pour la révolution africaine
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Copyright date of Introduction by François Maspero: 1964
In English; translated from French