National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Transformation as part of colonial identity
Vidím, Václav ; Fulka, Josef (advisor) ; Bierhanzl, Jan (referee)
(english): From a logical point of view, the colonial system is based on the difference between races, where one controls the other. This aspect significantly impacts the subjects from the perspective of their identity because their skin colour brings them significant disadvantages in how they live. The consequence of this discomfort can be the disintegration or assumption of a foreign identity, a pathological relationship to one's physicality. In the 20th century, many theorists of colonialism and post-colonialism analyzed these consequences. They are mainly Frantz Fanon, Albert Memmi and the American author Nella Larsen. All three of these provide a perspective that involves an active change in appearance as a way of integration that is not otherwise possible because, as David Macey writes in Frantz Fanon's biography, there are only two ways out, putting on a white mask, or rebellion. Therefore, if we turn to the first option, it is necessary to monitor the consequences for the subject undergoing this change and the one who observes it. That is also how the colonizer is doing. Thus, this work will not work with identity as something homogeneous, unchanging and motionless but as something that undergoes constant change.
Forced Recognition: Relation between Identity and Agency in the Works of Frantz Fanon
Vidím, Václav ; Ritter, Martin (advisor) ; Jirsa, Jakub (referee)
In my work I would like to focus on a relation of two notions very important in the works of Frantz Fanon. These two notions are identity and agecny. How does a colonised subject's idenity transform in the frames of anticolonial praxis. The two notions also stand in a relation to another notion - which is recognition. In colonial reality functions only a one-way recognition which so to say unwanted and forced. This kind of recognition does not reflect the reality colonised subject is in and it leaves him or her paralyzed. So is the anticolonial praxis a question of identity or of agency? What is a "lived experience of a black"? What is Fanon's opinion of Sartre's theory of recognition and how does he reforms Hegel's master and slave dialecitcs? I will also rely my work on contemporary postcolonial theory.

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