Frantz Fanon and Irish Cultural Nationalism Recently, Ireland was included in extensive research of post colonial society. The fact that it is geographically close to the UK, the fact that it is the same race, the fact that I speak the same language and have the same value system make our position post colonial matter. In fact, some people think it is impossible to distinguish between Irish and British. However, thinking wrongly the Irishman is a serious insult. In this article, I would like to consider Ireland's post-colonialist status newly in relation to Franz Fannon's "Earth Wandering".
According to the culture and the country written by Frantz Fanon, they are dependent on each other. Do not deal with other countries as an example When you change your culture, you give up everything you believe, that colonialism has lost it in that country. Examples of Culture and Rules Some of my mother's sons saw Ireland's problems through the eyes of their mother's mother in 1981. 21 prisoners participated in the hunger strike. The prisoners tried to let the British government recognize them as political prisoners rather than ordinary criminals. The strike appeared as one of the military modern martyrs of the Republic of Ireland - Bobby Sands
"Trouble" attacks made Northern Ireland a very unstable and tense place. Franz Fanon commented on the state of colonialism in his book The Wandering of the Earth. Fannon is a psychiatrist and a post colonialist theorist. His work is concentrated mainly in developing countries, especially in Algeria. To eliminate colonization, French farmers claimed violence against colonialists (he is known for this factor (Fanon, 1967, pp. 10 - 11)). His main concern is psychosis patients.
A few years later, psychiatrist Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) was born in Martinique but dedicated to African anti-colonialism, white skin, black mask (1952), and unfortunate earth (1961) It was done. Criticizing colonialism. Fannon's work such as Martignan writer Aimé Césaire (born 1913) (1955) "colonial discourse" reveals the racist and corrosive effects of colonialism and colonial discourse . Fannon is both a revolutionary and a critic. He joined the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN), and in his writing he supported the choice of armed struggle. Post-colonialists have maintained a fundamental, even revolutionary, ideological position and sensitivity from the French era.