Black Skin, White Masks [FHD · 4K]
If you’ve ever felt like you had to switch personas just to survive a workday or navigate a social space, you’ve touched the edges of a phenomenon Frantz Fanon diagnosed over 70 years ago. In his explosive 1952 debut, Black Skin, White Masks , Fanon didn’t just write a book; he performed a clinical autopsy on the psychological pathologies produced by colonialism . The "White Mask" as a Survival Tool
Racism is not just an idea; it is deeply embodied. Fanon describes the trauma of being "fixed" by a look or a comment (the infamous "Look, a Negro!"). Black Skin, White Masks
This blog post explores the psychological landscape of Frantz Fanon's 1952 seminal work, Black Skin, White Masks . If you’ve ever felt like you had to
Unmasking the Mind: Why Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks Still Haunts Us Fanon describes the trauma of being "fixed" by