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'A living testimony to Sartre as a significant anti-colonial figure, with not only an analytic brain but ethical precepts worthy of emulation. It provides a detailed and massively well-informed insight into French Colonial policies in Algeria.' - Human Nature Review
"Sartre is a true post-colonial pioneer. His ethical and political
struggle against all forms of oppression and exploitation speak to
the problems of our own times with a rare courage and
cogency."
Homi K. Bhabha, Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of English and
American Literature Harvard University
Nearly forty years after its first publication in French, this
collection of Sartre's writings on colonialism remains a supremely
powerful, and relevant, polemical work. Over a series of thirteen
essays Sartre brings the full force of his remarkable intellect
relentlessly to bear on his own country's conduct in Algeria, and
by extension, the West's conduct in the Third World in general. The
tussle is not equal, and the western imperialists emerge at the
end, bloody, bruised and thoroughly chastened. Most startling of
all is Sartre's advocacy of violence as a legitimate response to
repression, motivated by his belief that freedom was the central
characteristic of being human. Whether one agrees with his every
conclusion or not, "Colonialism and Neo-Colonialism" shows a
philosopher passionately engaged in using philosophy as a force for
change in the world. An important influence on postcolonial thought
ever since, this book takes on added resonance in the light of the
West's most recent bout of interference in the non-Western world.
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