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Alienação E Liberdade eBook

Escritos Psiquiátricos

by Frantz Fanon
language: brazilian portuguese
Publisher: Ubu Editora, May of 2020 ‧
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A obra de Frantz Fanon, psiquiatra e militante anticolonial marcou diversas gerações de ativistas de direitos civis e especialistas em estudos pós-coloniais. Conhecido pelos clássicos Pele negra, máscaras brancas (1952) e Os condenados da terra (1961), o autor deixou também uma significativa e menos conhecida obra ligada a sua experiência como psiquiatra. Os textos deste volume, inéditos em português e inacessíveis até pouco tempo em todo o mundo, tratam da relação entre alienação colonial e doenças mentais. Esta coletânea de textos propõe uma leitura política do hospital psiquiátrico, associando racismo e psiquiatria colonial: "Uma criança negra, normal, tendo crescido no seio de uma família normal, ficará anormal ao menor contato com o mundo branco", escreve Fanon. Com uma introdução do pesquisador Jean Khalfa e apresentação do professor de filosofia da UFRRJ Renato Noguera, o livro reúne mais de 20 escritos de Fanon, entre artigos científicos, sua tese em psiquiatria, um curso e textos inéditos publicados no jornal interno do hospital de Blida-Joinville onde ele trabalhou entre 1953 e 1956.

Alienação E Liberdade

Escritos Psiquiátricos

by Frantz Fanon

Property Description
ISBN: 9788571260450
Publisher: Ubu Editora
Release Date: May of 2020
Language: Brazilian Portuguese
Pages: 400
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in Portuguese > Politics > Politics in General
eBooks in Portuguese > Medicine > Nursing
EAN: 9788571260450
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Frantz Fanon

Frantz Fanon (1925-1961), psychiatrist and philosopher, is an unavoidable name in postcolonial studies and the anti-racist struggle.
He was born into a large family of the petty bourgeoisie of the French Antilles, on the island of Martinique. A descendant of enslaved Africans forcibly transported to this area – which had once ensured the wealth and balance of payments in France – he was the fifth child of a customs official and nevertheless had a carefree childhood, with access to a careful education. In his youth, however, he lived traumatic experiences when, in 1943, he left Martinique and joined the Free French troops in World War II. At that time, Fanon discovered that the equality proclaimed by the French Republic was an illusion, and quickly realized that he was not seen as an equal, a fact that contributed to his going to study medicine in the metropolis, the destination of the most ambitious or gifted, as had already happened with his mentor and friend Aimé Césaire – Fanon's teacher in his high school days –, benefiting from the fact that he is a former combatant.
In addition to his work as a physician and psychiatrist, Fanon supported the Algerian War of Independence from France and was a member of the Algerian National Liberation Front. He left a body of work that greatly influenced postcolonial studies and the anti-racist struggle, addressing the human, social and cultural consequences of decolonization. A great intellectual of his time and a Marxist humanist, he elaborated with Jean-Paul Sartre radical critiques of the strategies of violence and dehumanization that affected the colonized.
He died prematurely, in 1961, at the age of 36, victim of leukemia.

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