Abstract
This article investigates Frantz Fanon's theory of race and racism. Three constitutive elements of Frantz Fanon's racial theory are explored--race as historically situated, race as culturally maintained, and racial constructions as embedded in human ontology. It is argued that Fanon's work provides a starting point for bringing conversations of race and racism into globalization theories in ways that create space and possibility for human emancipation under twenty-first century globalization.
Recommended Citation
Kane, Nazneen
(2007)
"Frantz Fanon’s Theory of Racialization: Implications for Globalization,"
Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge:
Vol. 5:
Iss.
3, Article 32.
Available at:
http://scholarworks.umb.edu/humanarchitecture/vol5/iss3/32
