“The Fact of Blackness”: Fanon’s Take on the Position of Black People in Society
In “The Fact of Blackness,” an excerpt from Black Skins, White Masks, Franz Fanon discusses how Black people are viewed by white allies and by people who take pity on them, challenging both the assumption that there is nothing unique about Black people and the assumption that there is something deficient about Black people.
Fanon refers to Jean-Paul Sartre, an ally, who asserts that Black people are the same as any other working-class people, thus erasing the uniqueness of the Black identity and the struggles undergone by Black people. Fanon writes: “[…] he was reminding me that my blackness was only a minor term. […] Jean-Paul Sartre had forgotten that the Negro suffers in his body quite differently from the white man. […]” (1359). This refers to the centuries of structural discrimination and oppression suffered by Black people that makes the Black experience fundamentally different from the experiences of white people. While it is true that working-class white people have their own struggles, it would be intellectually dishonest to claim that Black people do not uniquely suffer on account of their race, something that white working-class people do not have to experience. This is something that is relevant even today, not just when it comes to the opinions of white liberals but also with regard to the people who claim that there is no such thing as systemic/structural discrimination. The history of oppression of Black people has to be taken into account before naively and insensitively claiming that there is a level playing ground and anyone can achieve upward mobility through hard work. In the racialized American society, there are various other factors with regard to race that need to be considered before coming to conclusions such as this.
While Fanon makes a strong case in favor of the struggles that the Black experience comes with, he strongly asserts that such challenges do not constitute shortcomings. He says: “[…] I refuse to accept that amputation. I feel in myself a soul as immense as the world, truly a soul as deep as the deepest of rivers, my chest has the power to expand without limit” (1360). He takes pride of his Black identity even as he stresses the systemic discrimination that Black people experience in white-dominated societies.
Fanon’s positions have a lot of relevance in American society today. We need to celebrate literature, art, cinema, and music by Black people. We need to make the teaching and learning of history more comprehensive so that the rich history of Black people is included in it. This will help students learn more about the unique challenges faced by African American people while also acknowledging their contributions to American society. The fact that systemic/structural discrimination exists needs to be understood so that people realize that the existing socio-economic structure is not working for everyone and for people to have equal access to opportunities, a lot of things need to be fundamentally changed and reshaped and for that we need to understand the roots of the many inequalities we find in American society.


