1st Edition

Fanon and Lacan Decolonial Psychoanalysis

Edited By Derek Hook, Sinan Richards Copyright 2027
328 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

328 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Fanon and Lacan: Decolonial Psychoanalysis explores the influence of psychoanalysis on Frantz Fanon’s thought and delves into Fanon’s innovative use of psychoanalysis as a way of diagnosing and addressing the socio-psychological traumas of colonialism and racialised structures of power. The contributors in this volume highlight how, by engaging with Lacanian concepts such as the mirror stage,... Read more

Part One: Historical Perspectives

1.     Fanon in the mirror of the “first Lacan” 

 Matthieu Renault

2.     The Logician of Madness: Fanon’s Lacan 

 Sinan Richards

3.     The specular image in Fanon’s psychiatric and political thought

Jean Khalfa and Stéphane Thibierge

4.     “Militant Psychopathology”; Frantz Fanon and Évolution psychiatrique

Patrick ffrench

5.     Octave Mannoni through Frantz Fanon: Critical and analytical reflections on psychoanalysis and decolonization

Livio Boni

 

Part Two: Clinical Perspectives

6.     Fanon and Lacan: “Secretarial” Work with Psychosis and Extreme States

Anna Kreienberg

7.     The Colonial Psychoses

Christopher Chamberlin

8.     Is Racism a Superegoic Construct? 

 Sophie Mendelsohn

 

Part Three: Psychosocial Perspectives

9.     Fanon’s decolonial objects: Gaze and voice in A Dying Colonialism

Derek Hook

10.  The Politics of the Voice: A Note on Fanon’s Decolonization of the Clinic 

 Guillaume Sibertin-Blanc

11.  “I am not my origin…    Ontological Resistance with Fanon, Merleau-Ponty, and Lacan 

 Anna Lampe

12.  Revolutionary Shame: A Clinical Praxis

Alex Colston

 

Part Four: Political/Decolonial Perspectives

13.  Decolonization and the Question of Transformation: On Fanon’s ‘Stretching’ of Marx and Lacan 

 Linette Park

14.  Fanon, Lacan and Shifts in the “Globalization” of Race in Psychoanalysis 

Marisa Berwald

15.  The end of the world, goddamn it’: Fanon, Lacan, and Tosquelles.

Sinan Richards

16.   Fanon’s zone of nonbeing and the Lacanian death drive

Derek Hook

 

Afterword – Psychoanalysis in Genocidal Times: Palestine and the Anti-Racist Politics of the Death Drive 

Zahi Zalloua

Biography

Derek Hook is professor of Psychology and a clinical supervisor at Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, USA and Extraordinary Professor of Psychology at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.

Sinan Richards is a lecturer in French at University College Cork, Ireland and a Visiting Fellow at King’s College London, UK.

‘On the face of it, one can hardly imagine two more different figures than Jacques Lacan and Frantz Fanon, both mythical in their own right – the esoteric analyst in the rarefied atmosphere of the French intellectual life, the activist on the cutting edge of the anti-colonial struggle, inspiring generations of militants. Their encounter may seem improbable, but it is necessary, essential, and most productive, indeed electrifying. Fanon could only start on his path through his engagement with early Lacan, with psychoanalysis which he immediately used as a revolutionary tool; and the Lacanian teaching needs to be reconsidered through Fanon’s lessons in confronting the colonial legacy of racism, deeply embedded in our culture, and by espousing all the intricate dimensions of the black. The present volume, gathering an outstanding group of prominent scholars, addresses an extraordinary multifaceted range of aspects of this encounter where two very different ways of engaging with radical change engross each other and produce real novelty.’

 Mladen Dolar, author of A Voice and Nothing More.

 

‘Fanon and Lacan: Decolonial Psychoanalysis is a bold rethinking of psychoanalysis from the colonial underside. It shows how Frantz Fanon and Jacques Lacan together open a path for a militant, decolonial critique that joins clinic and politics, desire and liberation.’

 Ahmad Fuad Rahmat, author of Decolonization and Psychoanalysis.


‘Hook and Richards have put together an impressive collection of papers touching on the intellectual relationship between Fanon and Lacan - a much needed intervention facilitating a much needed and overdue dialogue. Bridging historical, clinical, psychosocial, and political perspectives, this book reveals the richness and revolutionary promise of a decolonial psychoanalysis. Hook and Richards have curated a must-read volume, with each chapter showing conclusively why the "New Fanon" is here to stay.’

 Daniel Gaztambide, author of Decolonizing Psychoanalytic Technique.

 

‘Fanon and Lacan powerfully intervenes upon Fanonian studies to illuminate the dynamism of Frantz Fanon’s theorizing.  Taking seriously Fanon’s decolonizing methodology of “dialectical substitution,” this collection’s rich array of essays teach us not only how to read Fanon in context of his contemporaries but also how to read Fanon’s contemporaries—and most especially Jacques Lacan—in the nachträglich of Fanon’s revolutionary theorizations.’

 Sheldon George, author of Trauma and Race.

 

‘An excellent and timely collection that advances ongoing studies of the intellectual links between Fanon and Lacan; this collection, reimagines Lacanian psychoanalysis through what Hook and Richards call Fanon’s radical vernacularization of the discipline.’

 Gautam Basu Thakur, author of Postcolonial Lack

 

‘Fanon and Lacan is a volume unusually and brilliantly equal to Fanon's insistence that his own thought, like the time of psychoanalysis, comes "too soon...or too late."  Eschewing ordering claims to end and origin, readers are instead brought into and guided through the experimental working heart of Fanon's clinical and philosophic approach.  Homing in on lesser-known influences, affective universes, and moments of impassioned textual investigation, these essays share the virtues they collectively assign to Fanon's decolonial psychoanalysis--vernacular, heterodox, and, most crucially in a time of genocide, praxis-oriented.’

 Nica Siegal, author of Politics and Exhaustion.

 

‘An excellent and timely collection that advances ongoing studies of the intellectual links between Fanon and Lacan; this collection reimagines Lacanian psychoanalysis through what Fanon’s radical vernacularization of the discipline. Gautam Basu Thakur, author of Postcolonial Lack

However (and rightfully) ambivalent Fanon was about psychoanalysis he understood that dismantling a world needed it nevertheless. Certainly not a pure, uncritical psychoanalysis, but one augmented, rearticulated, de-ontologized, in what he called a ‘vehement confrontation of value.’ We have had enough critique: it is time for a newly made decolonial edifice. This marvelous collection is our handbook for the future.’

Jamieson Webster, author of On Breathing.

 

‘Of all the areas of Fanon’s thinking, none is more complex, contested or controversial than his conflictual relationship with psychoanalysis. The essays in this remarkable collection tease out the diversity of inventive paradoxical and paralogical forms developed in his psychoanalytic thought. Drawing on the full range of historical and creative critical possibilities, they explore the depths of Fanon’s strategic liaisons within the distinctive French psychoanalytic scene of his time, while teasing out the ways in which his psychoanalytic conceptions continued to inform his critiques of colonial domination. All scholars of Fanon will learn from the invaluable insights offered in this book.’

 Robert J.C. Young, co-editor, Frantz Fanon, Alienation and Freedom