Black Identity Within White Society
In Fanon’s The Fact of Blackness excerpt from Black Skin, White Masks, he does quite literally what the title says: he talks about what it means to be black in a white society, in a society where whiteness is dominant and posited as “superior”. Black identity in such a society emerges in relation to whiteness as an other, an outsider. The black individual enters into this world indeed as an individual with infinitely many unique aspects, yet (white) society imposes upon them the weight of what it thinks and expects of them. This is contrary to the white individual who enters this world, where the fact that they are white is never really made apparent to them except as a banal and mundane aspect in the same vein as height or eye-color. Unlike the black individual, white people are not given a definite script or conception that they are constantly expected to conform to in some way. They are allowed to be truly individuals. The dominance of whiteness allows it to be invisible: their culture is not seen as “white culture” but simply culture itself–“normal culture”.
In the beginning of the text, Fanon talks about desperately trying to escape the perception of innate inferiority that society ascribes to him, leading him to discover African history and how–contrary to what white society has people including himself to believe–Africans indeed built great civilizations and had the capabilities to do everything that white society says they cannot do without them. But Fanon represents the reaction from white society when he challenges them with these facts and attempts to stand his ground as a black person who will not be dictated by them as one where white society reiterates its dominance of the world, and how Fanon’s passion and sensitivity now only serves as entertainment. White society demands out of Fanon to meet them on the level of reason, to ground black identity in their rationalist and scientistic terms, for his unearthing of history and his passion is not enough to unshackle him from whiteness.
And when Fanon then attempts to challenge white society on this level, he is again thrusted back into his prior position. He particularly speaks of how Jean-Paul Sartre’s account of black identity simply places it as yet another moment in the necessary progression of history: that the only function and purpose of black identity is to negate white identity, to thrust white identity into a position of instability, and to then engage in a mutual annihilation in order to finally realize a society of racelessness. For Fanon, Sartre disempowers black people and glosses over the uniqueness of their experiences and their oppression by framing black identity this way. Rather than empowering Fanon and black people to stand firm in their identity, their culture, their difference from white society, Sartre simply tells black people that their only purpose is to dissolve themselves into white society to realize some higher, general identity–that their purpose is to simply move the dialectic of history forward.
In this sense, Fanon demonstrates the perpetual frustration of black people to create for themselves an independent identity. At every instance and attempt, they are met with recuperation from white society, and then thrown back into a relation of inferiority and non-subjectivity: the black individual cannot live for themself as themselves, but they must conform to the ascriptions of white society where they are entirely a “toy in the white man’s hands” (1360). To be an subject–that not only experiences the world in a unique manner, but also possesses the agency and ability to act upon it and express themselves as themselves–is a privilege reserved only for white people. In white society, the black individual is only an object to be acted upon by the (white) world. They are relegated to a perpetual state of reaction with any expression of themselves and of their blackness cracked down upon–either by literal, physical/legal, means or by being subtle means of being labelled “offensive”, “unprofessional”, barred from particular opportunities and representation, and so on.


