Black and Ashamed
131
Press, 2004), liv. Hardt and Negri call this same moment “the
boomerang
of alterity” or the “inversion of the colonialist logic itself,” which they, nev-
ertheless, see as illusory, since it reappropriates the racial inheritances it is,
at the same time, committed to abolishing. Cf. Michael Hardt and Antonio
Negri,
Empire
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), 130, 131.
41 Fanon,
The Wretched of the Earth
, 148.
42 For Fanon, this desire is a direct effect of the social imperative to “‘whiten
or perish’” and is pathological since it creates
a fantasy of identiication,
“hallucinatory lactiication,” that leverages black subjectivity against itself.
Not internally determined, it has its origin in “the real source of conlict,”
which, for Fanon, is “the social structure” that “proclaims the superiority
of one race over another” and makes “inferiority complex possible.” Fanon,
Black Skin, White Masks
, 80.
43 In
The Souls of Black Folk
, Du Bois exposes the deep-lying laws in the
accommodationism of Washington’s “Atlanta Compromise” that “counsels
submission to civic inferiority” for the beneit of economic self-suficiency.
“In counselling patience and courtesy” in demands for civic and political
equality, “Mr. Washington represents in Negro thought the old attitude of
adjustment and submission,” practically accepting “the alleged inferiority
of the Negro races” that should focus “all their energies on industrial edu-
cation,
the accumulation of wealth, and the conciliation of the South.” For
Du Bois, Washington’s “gospel of Work and Money” represents the “civic
death” of black America, while it also surreptitiously legitimizes the contin-
ued persistence of racial discrimination. Du Bois,
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