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Fanons Three Stages Related To The Indigenous People Of Chiapas

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 4.44
  Total Words: 1110
  Total Characters: 6079
  Number of Sentences: 61


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 18.2
  Characters per Words: 5.48


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 49.58
  Fog Scale Level: 14.16
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.87  

Fanon's Three Stages Related to the Indigenous People of Chiapas


     The passage Shadows of Tender Fury  by Subcommander Marcos of the
Zapatista Army explains that the people of Chiapas are currently facing a period
of revolution. The Zapatista army (consisting of Chiapian campesinos) has risen
to combat the intolerant system of oppression by the Mexican government and has
attempted to create a better lifestyle for the campesinos of Chiapas.  Frantz
Fanon's three stages to national culture; assimilation, self discovery, and
revolution, relate to the struggle of the campesinos of Chiapas.  In the last
500 years, the indigenous people of Chiapas have faced all three of Fanan's
stages during their struggle for the development of a national culture.
     Five-hundred years ago when the first Europeans came in contact with the
Mayan Indians, the first stage of Fanon's theory, assimilation, began
formalizing.  Throughout history the colonizers of Mexico were more
technologically advanced than the natives.  The Europeans had guns, cannons and
massive ships.  Not only did these possessions enable them to have greater brute
force, but it took the white man to the level of the gods in the eyes of the
natives.  The colonizers could easily take advantage of this reverence.  Fanon
states "The effect consciously sought by colonialism was to drive into the
natives' heads the idea that if the settlers were to leave, they would at once
fall back into barbarism, degradation, and bestiality."(Fanon 211)  The
colonizers, believing the natives were savages that needed enlightenment, forced
European culture upon them.  The Europeans believed that to assimilate the
natives to European culture was to help them progress.  Therefore, to return to
the old ways would have been regressing.  When the natives objected to the
forced assimilation, the colonizers smothered the rebellious efforts with
stronger, more lethal weapons.  Fanon compares the colonizer to a mother who
...

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