¶ … Fanon" by John Edgar Wideman and "Wretched of the Earth" by Frantz Fanon. Specifically it will discuss physical violence in the two works. Violence, especially physical violence such as torture, figures prominently in these two works. Fanon himself promotes violence as a way to fight against colonization of one country by another, and Wideman's book uses violence for its shock value (as in the severed head), almost as a tribute to Fanon's support of violence. Violence is prominent in both works, because we live in a violent society, and violence is what gets our attention.
Wideman's work shows the violence of the inner city, where he grew up, and shows the effects of it on his family. His brother is incarcerated for murder, and violence permeates the work, which he means as a tribute to Frantz Fanon. Fanon actively promoted violence as a way for colonial territories to gain their freedom from their colonizers. He writes, "The native who decides to put the program into practice, and to become its moving force, is ready for violence at all times" (Fanon 37). Historians believe that Fanon's words did incite some colonies to revolt, and that they at least in part helped create Algeria's war for independence against France. Fanon actually fought in that war, against France, who he had fought for in another war.
Wideman writes a book about Fanon and his exploits, and violence plays heavily throughout the book. His brother says, "I mean, the way it is today the hands don't speak no more. Squabbling....
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