Colonial Trauma. Karima Lazali
href="#ulink_51cb6dc3-4246-52c5-ac7c-eb3391ccfd3e">A strange reversal in naming Do freedom and terror go hand in hand? Notes
15 7 State of Terror and State Terror A clinical understanding of terror The terrified subject’s self-elimination Psychological terror is always political Reconciliation: state terror? When the state tries to make its practice of disappearance disappear Notes
16 8 Legitimacy, Fratricide, and Power Jugurtha: a fratricidal hero Unpunished crimes within the Republic The legitimacy the French conquest claimed for itself The impassioned scene of coloniality The specter of discord: el Fitna Notes
17 9 Getting Out of the Colonial Pact After Liberation, the indefatigable re-enactment of coloniality within subjectivities and the political order Trauma as shelter and alibi The brutalization of the living: the disappearance of children The “bone seekers”: from children to fathers Notes
18 Conclusion: Ending the Colonial Curse: Lessons from Fanon The “colonial pact”: erasure of memory, disappearance of bodies, dispossession of existence The mystical quality of the colonized For a future liberation Notes
19 Index
Guide
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