This made me think of the
difference between being the “essential” and being the “other”. Prior to
addressing their own people, Fanon thinks native writers (and I assume other
artists, as well) write to and for their oppressor. By doing this, they
continue to measure and define their identity against that of their oppressor,
even when it is explicitly hostile to the oppressor—they continue being the other.
Once they begin writing for themselves and their own people, they begin
creating an essential identity. It is “literature of combat, because it moulds
the national consciousness,” because it is creating a new and essential
identity, free and distinct from the identity of the oppressor.
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