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Reclaiming history: dehumanization and the failure of decolonization

David Boucher (Department of Law and Politics, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK) (Department of Political Science, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)

International Journal of Social Economics

ISSN: 0306-8293

Article publication date: 17 October 2019

Issue publication date: 21 November 2019

1374

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to show, with reference to the writings of important decolonization theorists and liberationists, how Nazism in Europe and the establishment of the UN had a significant impetus in awakening the sense of injustice in colonised peoples in Africa and the Lesser Antilles. Colonized peoples were denied human rights through a process of dehumanization, which involved seizing “native” histories and representing them as backward, depraved and savage, awaiting the arrival of European civilization. Marxism, further supported this narrative by denying that “primitive” peoples had histories, and being unable to account for race and racism because of its emphasis on class. Colonization evolved, not into decolonization, but neo-colonialism because of the complicity of “native” bourgeois elites.

Design/methodology/approach

The methodology combines historical narrative with theoretical insight from the point of view of the colonised, such as Fanon, Cabral, Mimmi, Ceasare, Nkrumah, etc. It is hermeneutic in its methodology.

Findings

Peoples of the Lesser Antilles and Africans were dehumanized; denied human rights; and dehistoricized. Prominent liberation theorists develop these themes and reject elements of Marxism in order to reflect the unique experiences of the colonised. Colonization gets under the skin of the colonised and persists in contemporary societies. Colonization was replaced by neo-colonialism, not decolonization.

Research limitations/implications

The implications are to bring to the fore the importance of colonialism in relation to western practises of anti-Fascism and the promotion of human rights, while perpetrating Fascist modes of behaviour and denying human rights in colonised countries. Far from being simply an historical phenomenon the insidious implications persist.

Social implications

The demonstration of how deep the roots of colonialism go, and how difficult the task of decolonization has become as a consequence of systematic western “penetration”.

Originality/value

It looks at colonialism and its widespread injustices through the activists who suffered at the hands of a system of rule based exploitation and dehumanization effected not only by seizing their land, but also their history language and culture, ensuring that decolonization became transformed into neo-colonialism.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments on this article.

Citation

Boucher, D. (2019), "Reclaiming history: dehumanization and the failure of decolonization", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 46 No. 11, pp. 1250-1263. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSE-03-2019-0151

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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