Discourse
on Civilization Notes
I: looking clearly at what colonization is and is
not—ItÕs not civilization!
A
civilization that
á
proves incapable of
solving the problems it creates ˆ a decadent civilization.
á
chooses to close its
eyes to its most crucial problems ˆ a stricken civilization.
á
uses its principles for
trickery and deceit ˆ a dying civilization.
so-called
European civilization—"Western" civilization—
shaped
by two centuries of bourgeois rule
ˆ incapable of solving the two major problems to which
its existence has given rise:
the
problem of the proletariat and the
colonial problem;
unable
to justify itself
hypocrisy which is all the more odious because it is less and
less likely to deceive
Europe
is indefensible.
American
strategists
10
indictment
by tens and tens of millions from the depths of slavery
The
colonialists may
á
kill in Indochina,
á
torture in Madagascar
[1947]
á
imprison in Black
Africa,
á
crack down in the West
Indies.
the
principal lie which is the source
of all the others: Colonization = civilization
the
commonest curse: is to be the dupe in good faith of a collective hypocrisy that
cleverly misrepresents problems, the better to legitimize the hateful solutions
provided for them.
to
see clearly, to think clearly—that is, dangerously—and to answer clearly what it is not:
á
neither evangelization
á
nor a philanthropic
enterprise
á
nor a desire to push
back the frontiers of ignorance, disease, and tyranny
á
nor a project undertaken
for the greater glory of God
á
nor an attempt to extend
the rule of law.
To
admit once for all, without
flinching at the consequences,
á
that the decisive actors
here are the adventurer and the pirate,
á
the wholesale grocer and
the ship owner,
á
the gold digger and the
merchant,
á
appetite and force,
á
and behind them, the
baleful projected shadow of a form of civilization which, at a certain point in
its history, finds itself obliged, for internal reasons, to extend to a world
scale the competition of its antagonistic economies.
hypocrisy is of recent date (earlier conquests = killing and
plunder
the
slavering apologists came later;
that
the chief culprit = Christian pedantry:
á
laid down the dishonest
equations Christianity = civilization, paganism = savagery,
á
abominable colonialist
and racist consequences
á
victims = the Indians,
the yellow peoples, and the Negroes.
contact
Has
colonization really placed civilizations in contact? no.
between
colonization and civilization there is an infinite distance
II: how colonization works to decivilize the colonizer—the
many Hitlers
13
First
we must study how colonization works to decivilize the colonizer,
to brutalize him in the true sense of the word,
to degrade him,
to awaken him to buried instincts:
á
covetousness,
á
violence
á
race hatred
á
moral relativism
and
we must show that
each
time a head is cut off or an eye put out in Vietnam and in France they accept
the fact,
each
time a little girl is raped and in France they accept the fact,
each
time a Madagascan is tortured and in France they accept the fact,
civilization
acquires another dead weight,
a
universal regression takes place,
a
gangrene sets in,
a
center of infection begins to spread;
and
that at the end of
á
all these treaties that
have been violated,
á
all these lies that have
been propagated,
á
all these punitive
expeditions that have been tolerated,
á
all these prisoners who
have been tied up and "interrogated,"
á
all these patriots who
have been tortured,
at
the end of
á
all the racial pride
that has been encouraged,
á
all the boastfulness
that has been displayed,
a
poison has been instilled into the veins of Europe and, slowly but surely, the
continent proceeds toward savagery.
14
the
bourgeoisie is awakened by a terrific
reverse shock: the gestapos are
busy, the prisons fill up, the torturers around the racks invent, refine, discuss.
it's
Nazism, it will pass!
III. Answering the charges that heÕs
anti-European &prophet of return to the past 26-32
31
create a new society
rich
with productive power of modern times,
warm
with all the fraternity of olden days
Soviet
Union
the
petty bourgeois
32
Start the forgetting machine!
IV The watchdogs of capitalism: hegemony &
civil society -45
33
tools of capitalism
34
Whether
personally—that is, in the private conscience of Peter or Paul—they
are or are not colonialists, because the essential thing is that their highly
problematical subjective good faith
is entirely irrelevant to the objective social implications of the evil work they perform as watchdogs of
colonialism.
V Claims to Western superiority 46-56
54
the only history is white
VI The new barbarian conquest of empire: the
Americans 57-61
And
they wait, and they hope; and they hide the truth from themselves, that it is
barbarism, but the supreme barbarism,
the crowning barbarism that sums up all the daily barbarisms; that it is
Nazism, yes, but that before they were its victims, they were its accomplices;
that they tolerated that Nazism before it was inflicted on them, that they
absolved it, shut their eyes to it, legitimized it, because, until then, it had
been applied only to non-European peoples; that they have cultivated that
Nazism, that they are responsible for it. and that before engulfing the whole
of Western, Christian civilization in its reddened waters, it oozes, seeps, and
trickles from every crack.
Yes,
it would be worthwhile to study clinically, in detail the steps taken by Hitler
and Hitlerism and to reveal to the very distinguished, very humanistic, very
Christian bourgeois of the twentieth century that without his being aware of
it, he has a Hitler inside him, that Hitler inhabits him, that Hitler is his demon, that if he rails against him, he is being inconsistent
and that, at bottom, what he cannot forgive Hitler for is not crime in itself, the crime against man, it is not the humiliation of man as such, it is the crime against the white man, the humiliation
of the white man, and the fact that he applied to Europe colonialist procedures
which until then had been reserved exclusively for the Arabs of Algeria, the
coolies of India, and the blacks of Africa.
15
And
that is the great thing I hold against pseudo—humanism: that for too long
it has diminished the rights of man, that its concept of those rights has
been—and still is—narrow and fragmentary, incomplete and biased
and, all things considered, sordidly racist. I have talked a good deal about
Hitler. Because he deserves it: he makes it possible to see things on a large
scale and to grasp the fact that capitalist society, at its present stage, is
incapable of establishing a concept of the rights of all men, just as it has
proved incapable of establishing a system of individual ethics. Whether one
likes it or not, at the end of the blind alley that is Europe, I mean the
Europe of Adenauer, Schuman, Bidault, and a few others, there is Hitler. At the
end of capitalism, which is eager to outlive its day, there is Hitler. At the
end of formal humanism and philosophic renunciation, there is Hitler . And this
being so, I cannot help thinking of one of his statements: "We aspire not
to equality but to domination. The country of a foreign race must become once
again a country of serfs, of agricultural laborers, or industrial workers. It
is not a question of eliminating the inequalities among men but of widening
them and making them into a law." That rings clear, haughty, and brutal
and plants us squarely in the middle of howling savagery. But let us come down
a step. Who is speaking? I am ashamed to say it: it is the Western humanist,
the "idealist" philosopher.
That his name is Renan is an accident. That the passage is taken from a book
entitled La Rhfonne intellectuelle et morale, that it was written in France just after a war which
16
France
had represented as a war of right against might, tells us a great deal about
bourgeois morals.
The
regeneration of the inferior or degenerate races by the superior races is part
of the providential order of things for humanity. With us, the common man is
nearly always a declasse nobleman, his heavy hand is better suited to handling
the sword than the menial tool. Rather than work, he chooses to fight, that is,
he returns to his first estate. Regere imperio populos, that is our vocation. Pour forth this
all—consuming activity onto countries which, like China, are crying aloud
for foreign conquest. Turn the adventurers who disturb European society into a ver
sacrum, a horde like those of the
Franks, the Lombards, or the Normans, and every man will be in his right role.
Nature has made a race of workers, the Chinese race, who have wonderful manual
dexterity and almost no sense of honor; govern them with justice, levying from
them, in return for the blessing of such a government, an ample allowance for
the conquering race, and they will be satisfied; a race of tillers of the soil,
the Negro; treat him with kindness and humanity, and all will be as it should;
a race of masters and soldiers, the European race. Reduce this noble race to
working in the ergastulum like
Negroes and Chinese, and they rebel. In Europe, every rebel is, more or less, a
soldier who has missed his calling, a creature made for the heroic life, before
whom you are setting a task that is contrary to his race—a poor worker, too good a soldier. But the life at which
our workers rebel would make a Chinese or a fellah happy, as they are not
military creatures in the least. Let each one do what he is made for. and
all will be well.
Hitler?
Rosenberg? No, Renan. But let us come down one step further. And it is the
long—winded politician. Who protests? No one, so far as I
Discourse
on Colonialism I 17
know,
when M. Albert Sarraut, the former governor—genera1 of Indochina, holding
forth to the students at the Ecole Coloniale, teaches them that it would be
puerile to object to the European colonial enterprises in the name of "an
alleged right to possess the land one occupies, and some sort of right to
remain in fierce isolation, which would leave unutilized resources to lie
forever idle in the hands of incompetents." And who is roused to
indignation when a certain Rev. Barde assures us that if the goods of this
world "remained divided up indefinitely, as they would be without
colonization, they would answer neither the purposes of God nor the just
demands of the human collectivity"? Since, as his fellow Christian, the
Rev. Muller, declares: "Humanity must not, cannot allow the incompetence,
negligence, and laziness of the uncivilized peoples to leave idle indefinitely
the wealth which God has confided to them, charging them to make it serve the
good of all." No one. I mean not one established writer, not one
academician, not one preacher, not one crusader for the right and for religion,
not one "defender of the human person." And yet, through the mouths
of the Sarrauts and the Bardes, the Mullers and the Renans, through the mouths
of all those who considered—and consider—it lawful to apply to
non—European peoples "a kind of expropriation for public
purposes" for the benefit of nations that were stronger and better
equipped, it was already Hitler speaGing! What am I driving at? At this idea:
that no one colonizes innocently, that no one colonizes with impunity ei
18
/
ther;
that a nation which colonizes, that a civilization which justifies
colonization—and therefore force—is a1ready a sick civilization, a
civilization that is morally diseased, that irresistibly, progressing from one
consequence to another, one repudiation to another, calls for its Hitler, I
mean its punishment. ~olonization: bridgehead in a campaign to civilize
barbarism, from which there may emerge at any moment the negation of
civilization, pure and simple. Elsewhere I have cited at length a few incidents
culled from the history of colonial expeditions. Unfortunately, this did not
find favor with everyone. It seems that I was pulling old skeletons out of the
closet. Indeed! Was there no point in quoting Colonel de Montagnac, one of the
conquerors of Algeria: "In order to banish the thoughts that sometimes
besiege me, I have some heads cut off, not the heads of artichokes but the
heads of men." Would it have been more advisable to refuse the floor to
Count d'H6risson: "It is true that we are bringing back a whole barrelful
of ears collected, pair by pair, from prisoners, friendly or enemv." ./ Should
I have refused Saint—Arnaud the right to profess his barbarous faith:
"We lay waste, we burn, we plunder, we destroy the houses and the
trees." Should I have prevented Marshal Bugeaud from systematizing all
that in a daring theory and invoking the precedent of famous ancestors:
"We must have a great invasion of Africa, like the invasions of the Franks
and the Goths." Lastly, should I have cast back into the shadows of ob—
Discourse
on Colonialism I 19
livion
the memorable feat of arms of General Gerard and kept silent about the capture
of Ambike, a city which, to tell the truth, had never dreamed of defending
itself: "The native riflemen had orders to kill only the men, but no one
restrained them; intoxicated by the smell of blood, they spared not one woman,
not one child. . . . At the end of the afternoon, the heat caused a light mist
to arise: it was the blood of the five thousand victims, the ghost of the city,
evaporating in the setting sun." Yes or no, are these things true? And the
sadistic pleasures, the nameless delights that send voluptuous shivers and
quivers through Loti's carcass when he focuses his field glasses on a good
massacre of the Annamese? True or not true?" And if these things are true,
as no one can deny, will it be said, in order to minimize them, that these
corpses don't prove anything? For my part, if I have recalled a few details of
these hideous butcheries, it is by no means because I take a morbid delight in
them, but because I think that these heads of men, these collections of ears,
these burned houses, these Gothic invasions, this steaming blood, these cities
that evaporate at the edge of the sword, are not to be so easily disposed of.
They prove that colonization, I
This
is a reference to the account of the taking of Thuan—An which appeared in
Le Figaro in September 1883 and is quoted in N. Serban's book, Loti, sa vie, son
oeuwe. "Then the great slaughter
had begun. They had fired in double—salvos! and it was a pleasure to see
these sprays of bullets, that were so easy to aim, come down on them twice a
minute, surely and methodically, on command. . . . We saw some who were quite
mad and stood up seized with a dizzy desire to run. . . . They zigzaged,
running every which way in this race with death, holding their garments up
around their waists in a comical way . . . and then we amused ourselves
counting the dead, etc."
Discourse
on Colonialism I 21
repeat,
dehumanizes even the most civilized man; that colonial activity, colonial
enterprise, colonial conquest, which is based on contempt for the native and
justified by that contempt, inevitably tends to change him who undertakes it;
that the colonizer, who in order to ease his conscience gets into the habit of
seeing the other man as an animal, accustoms himself to treating him like an
animal, and tends objectively to transform himself into an animal. It is this result, this boomerang
effect of colonization, that I wanted to point out. Unfair? No. There was a
time when these same facts were a source of pride, and when, sure of the
morrow, people did not mince words. One last quotation; it is from a certain
Carl Siger, author of an Essai sur la colonisation (Paris, 1907): The new countries offer a vast field for
individual, violent activities which, in the metropolitan countries, would run
up against certain prejudices, against a sober and orderly conception of life,
and which, in the colonies, have greater freedom to develop and, consequently,
to affirm their worth. Thus to a certain extent the colonies can serve as a
safety valve for modern society. Even if this were their only value. it would
be immense. Truly, there are stains that it is beyond the power of man to wipe
out and that can never be fully expiated. But let us speak about the colonized.
I see clearly what colonization has destroyed: the wonderful Indian
civilizations—and neither Deterding nor Royal Dutch nor Standard Oil will
ever console me for the Aztecs and the Incas. I see clearly the civilizations,
condemned to perish at a future date, into which it has introduced a principle
of ruin: the South Sea islands, Nigeria, Nyasaland. I see less clearly the
contributions it has made. Security? Culture? The rule of law? In the meantime,
I look around and wherever there are colonizers and colonized face to face, I
see force, brutality, cruelty, sadism, conflict, and, in a parody of education,
the hasty manufacture of a few thousand subordinate functionaries,
"boys," artisans, office clerks, and interpreters necessary for the
smooth operation of business. I spoke of contact. Between colonizer and
colonized there is room only for forced labor, intimidation, pressure, the
police, taxation, theft, rape, compulsory crops, contempt, mistrust, arrogance,
self—complacency, swinishness, brainless elites, de— graded masses.
No human contact, but relations of domination and submission which turn the
colonizing man into a classroom monitor, an army sergeant, a prison guard, a
slave driver, and the indigenous man into an instrument of production. My turn
to state an equation: colonization = "thingification." I hear the
storm. They talk to me about progress, about "achievements," diseases
cured, improved standards of living. I am talking about societies drained of
their essence, cultures trampled underfoot, institutions undermined, lands
confiscated, religions smashed, magnificent artistic creations destroyed,
extraordinary possibilities wiped out. They throw facts at my head, statistics,
mileages of roads, canals, and railroad tracks. I am talking about thousands of
men sacrificed to the 22 I
Aimb
Cbsaire Congo—Ocean." I am
talking about those who, as I write this, are digging the harbor of Abidjan by
hand. I am talking about millions of men torn from their gods, their land,
their habits, their life—from life, from the dance, from wisdom. I am
talking about millions of men in whom fear has been cunningly instilled, who
have been taught to have an inferiority complex, to tremble, kneel, despair,
and behave like flunkeys. They dazzle me with the tonnage of cotton or cocoa
that has been exported, the acreage that has been planted with olive trees or
grapevines. I am talking about natural economies that have been disrupted—harmonious and viable economies
adapted to the indigenous
population—about food crops destroyed, malnutrition permanently
introduced, agricultural development oriented solely toward the benefit of the
metropolitan countries, about the looting of products, the looting of raw
materials. They pride themselves on abuses eliminated. I too talk about abuses,
but what I say is that on the old ones—very real—they have superimposed
others—very detestable. They talk to me about local tyrants brought to
reason; but I note that in general the old tyrants get on very well with the
new ones. and that there has been established between them, to the detriment of
the people, a circuit of mutual services and complicity. They talk to me about
civilization, I talk about proletarianization and mystification. For my part, I
make a systematic defense of the nonEuropean civilizations. * A railroad line
connecting Brazzaville with the port of PointeNoire. (Trans.)
Discourse
on Colonialism I 23 Every day that
passes, every denial of justice, every beating by the police, every demand of
the workers that is drowned in blood, every scandal that is hushed up, every
punitive expedition, every police van, every gendarme and every militiaman,
brings home to us the value of our old societies. They were communal societies,
never societies of the many for the few. They were societies that were not only
ante—capitalist, as has been said, but also anti—capitalist. They were democratic societies, always. They were
cooperative societies, fraternal societies. I make a systematic defense of the
societies destroyed by imperialism. They were the fact, they did not pretend to
be the idea; despite their faults, they were neither to be hated nor condemned.
They were content to be. In them, neither the word failure nor the word avatar had any meaning. They kept hope intact. Whereas those
are the only words that can, in a11 honesty, be applied to the European
enterprises outside Europe. My only consolation is that periods of colonization
pass, that nations sleep only for a time, and that peoples remain. This being
said, it seems that in certain circles they pretend to have discovered in me an
"enemy of Europe7' and a prophet of the return to the ante—European
past. For my part, I search in vain for the place where I could have expressed
such views; where I ever underestimated the importance of Europe in the history
of human thought; where I ever preached a return of any kind; where I ever claimed that there could be
a return. The truth is that I have
said something very different: to wit, that the great historical tragedy of'
Africa has been
28
I Ai d Cesaire nations from the vat
and intoxicating himself with them as with new wine. Violence! The violence of
the weak. A significant thing: it is not the head of a civilization that begins
to rot first. It is the heart. I admit that as far as the health of Europe and
civilization is concerned, these cries of "Kill! kill!" and
"Let's see some blood," belched forth by trembling old men and
virtuous young men educated by the Jesuit Fathers, make a much more
disagreeable impression on me than the most sensational bank holdups that occur
in Paris. And that, mind you, is by no means an exception. On the contrary,
bourgeois swinishness is the rule. We've been on its trail for a century. We
listen for it, we take it by surprise, we sniff it out, we follow it, lose it,
find it again, shadow it, and every day it is more nauseatingly exposed. Oh! the
racism of these gentlemen does not bother me. I do not become indignant over
it. I merely examine it. I note it, and that is all. I am almost grateful to it
for expressing itself openly and appearing in broad daylight, as a sign. A sign
that the intrepid class which once stormed the bastilles is now hamstrung. A
sign that it feels itself to be mortal. A sign that it feels itself to be a
corpse. And when the corpse starts to babble, you get this sort of thing: There
was only too much truth in this first impulse of the Europeans who, in the
centuy of Columbus, refused to recognize as their fellow men the degraded
inhabitants of the new world . . . One
cannot gaze upon the savage for an instant without reading the anathema
written. I do 7 — —not
say upon his soul alone, but even on the external few of his body. And it's signed Joseph de Maistre. (That's what is
ground out by the mystical mill.) And then you get this:
Discourse
on Colonialism I 29 From the
selectionist point of view, I would look upon it as unfortunate if there should
be a very great numerical expansion of the yellow and black elements, which
would be difficult to eliminate. However, if the society of the future is
organized on a dualistic basis, with a wling class of dolich~ce~halic blonds
and a class of inferior race
confined to the roughest labor, it is possible that this latter rote would fall
to the yellow and black elements. In
this case, moreover, they would not be an inconvenience for the dolichocephalic
blonds but an advantage. . . . It must not be forgotten that [slavery] is no more abnormul than the
domestication of the horse or the ox. It
is therefore possible that it may reappear in the future in one form or
another. It is probably even inevitable that this will happen if the simplistic
solution does not come about instead —that of a single superior race,
leveled out by selection. That's what is ground out by the scientific mill, and
it's signed Lapouge. And you also get this (from the literary mill this time):
I know that I must believe myself superior to the poor Bayas of the Mambhre. I know
that I must take pride in my blood. When
a superior man ceases to believe himself superior, he actually ceases to be
superior. . . . When a superior race ceases to believe itself a chosen race,
it actuallu ceases to be a chosen race. .,
And it's signed Psichari—soldier—of— Africa. Translate it
into newspaper jargon and you get Faguet: The barbarian is of the same race,
after all, as the Roman and the Greek. He is a cousin. The yellow man, the black
man, is not our cousin at all. Here there is a real difference, a real
distance, and a very great one: an ethnological distance. After all, civilization has never yet
been made except by whites. . . . If
Europe becomes yellow, there will certainly be a regression, a new period of
darkness and confusion, that is, another Middle Ages.
24
I AM Cbsaire not so much that it was
too late in making contact with the rest of the world, as the manner in which
that contact was brought about; that Europe began to "propagate" at a
time when it had fallen into the hands of the most unscrupulous financiers and
captains of industry; that it was our misfortune to encounter that particular
Europe on our path, and that Europe is responsible before the human community
for the highest heap of corpses in history. In another connection, in judging
colonization, I have added that Europe has gotten on very well indeed with all
the local feudal lords who agreed to serve, woven a villainous complicity with
them, rendered their tyranny more effective and more efficient, and that it has
actually tended to prolong artificially the survival of local pasts in their
most pernicious aspects. I have said—and this is something very
different—that colonialist Europe has grafted modern abuse onto ancient
injustice, hateful racism onto old inequality. That if I am attacked on the
grounds of intent, I maintain that colonialist Europe is dishonest in trying to
justify its colonizing activity a posteriori by the obvious material progress that has been
achieved in certain fields under the colonial regime—since sudden
change is always possible, in history
as elsewhere; since no one knows at what stage of material development these
same countries would have been if Europe had not intervened; since the
technical outfitting of Africa and Asia, their administrative reorganization,
in a word, their "Europeanization," was (as is proved by the example
of Japan) in no way tied to the European occupation; since the Europeanization of the non—European
continents could have been accomplished otherwise than under the heel of
Europe; since
Discourse
on Colonialism / 25 this movement of Europeanization was in progress; since it was even slowed down; since in any case it
was dis— — torted by the European takeover. The proof is that at
present it is the indigenous peoples of Africa and Asia who are demanding
schools, and colonialist Europe which refuses them; that it is the African who
is asking for ports and roads, and colonialist~Europe which is niggardly on
this score; that it is the colonized man who wants to move forward, and the
colonizer who holds things back.
Discourse
on Colonialism I 27 To go further, I
make no secret of my opinion that at the present time the barbarism of Western
Europe has reached an incredibly high level, being only surpassedfar surpassed,
it is true—by the barbarism of the United States. And I am not talking
about Hitler, or the prison guard, or the adventurer, but about the
"decent fellow" across the way; not about the member of the SS, or
the gangster, but about the respectable bourgeois. In a time gone by, L6on Bloy
innocently became indignant over the fact that swindlers, perjurers, forgers,
thieves, and procurers were given the responsibility of "bringing to the
Indies the example of Christian virtues." We've made progress: today it is
the possessor of the " Christian virtues" who intrigues—with no
small success —for the honor of administering overseas territories
according to the methods of forgers and torturers. A sign that cruelty,
mendacity, baseness, and corruption have sunk deep into the soul of the
European bourgeoisie. I repeat that I am not talking about Hitler, or the SS,
or pogroms, or summary executions. But about a reaction caught unawares, a
reflex permitted, a piece of cynicism tolerated. And if evidence is wanted, I
could mention a scene of cannibalistic hysteria that I have been privileged to
witness in the French National Assembly. By Jove, my dear colleagues (as they
say), I take off my hat to you (a cannibal's hat, of course). Think of it!
Ninety thousand dead in Madagascar! Indochina trampled underfoot, crushed to
bits, assassinated, tortures brought back from the depths of the Middle Ages!
And what a spectacle! The delicious shudder that roused the dozing deputies.
The wild uproar! Bidault, looking like a communion wafer covered with shit
—unctuous and sanctimonious cannibalism; Moutet—the cannibalism of
shady deals and sonorous nonsense; CosteFloret—the cannibalism of an
unlicked bear cub, a blundering fool. Unforgettable, gentlemen! With fine
phrases as cold and solemn as a mummy's wrappings they tie up the Madagascan.
With a few conventional words they stab him for you. The time it takes to wet
your whistle, and they disembowel him for you. Fine work! Not a drop of blood
will be wasted. The ones who drink it to the last drop, never adding any water.
The ones like Ramadier, who smear their faces with it in the manner of
Silenus;* Fontlup—Esperaber—f who starches his moustache with it,
the walrus moustache of an ancient Gaul; old Desjardins bending over the ema*
In classical mythology Silenus was a satyr, the son of Pan. He was the
foster—father of Bacchus, the god of wine, and is described as a jolly
old man, usually drunk. (Trans.) t Not a bad fellow at bottom, as later events
proved, but on that day in an absolute frenzy. And then lower, always lower, to
the bottom of the pit, lower than the shovel can go, M. Jules Romains, of the
Academic Franqaise and the Revue des Deux Mondes. (It doesn't matter, of course, that M. Farigoule
changes his name once again and here calls himself Salsette for the sake of
convenience.)' The essential thing is that M. Jules Romains goes so far as to
write this: I am willing to carry on a discussion only with people who agree to
pose the following hypothesis: a France that had on its metropolitan soil ten
million blacks, five or six million of them in the valley of the Garonne. Would
our valiant populations of the Southwest never have been touched by race
prejudice? Would there not have been the slightest apprehension if the question
had arisen of turning all powers over to these Negroes, the sons of slaves? . .
. I once had opposite me a row of some twenty pure blacks. . . . I will not
even censure our Negroes and Negresses for chewing gum. I will only note . . . that
this movement has the effect of emphasizing the jaws, and that the associations
which come to mind evoke the equatorial forest rather than the procession of
the Panathenaea. . . . The black race has not yet produced, will never produce,
an Einstein, a Stravinsky, a Gershwin. One idiotic comparison for another:
since the prophet of the Reme des Deux Mondes and other places invites us to draw parallels between
"widely separated" things, may I be permitted, Negro that I am, to think
(no one being master of his free associations) that his voice has a Jules
Romains is the pseudonym of Louis Farigoule, which he legally adopted in 1953.
Salsette is a character in one of his books, Salsette Discovers America (1942, translated by Lewis Galantiere).
The passage quoted, however, appears only in the expanded second edition of the
book, published in France in 1950. (Trans.)
Discourse
on Colonialism I 31 less in common
with the rustling of the oak of Dodonaor even the vibrations of the cauldron—than
with the braying of a Missouri ass.* Once acain, I systematically defend ow old
Negro civi— lizations: they were courteous civilizations. So the real
problem, you say, is to return to them. No, I repeat. We are not men for whom
it is a question of "either—or." For us, the problem is not to
make a utopian and sterile attempt to repeat the past, but to go beyond. It is
not a dead society that we want to revive. We leave that to those who go in for
exoticism. Nor is it the present colonial society that we wish to prolong, the
most putrid carrion that ever rotted under the sun. It is a new society that we
must create, with the help of all our brother slaves, a society rich with all
the productive power of modern times, warm with all the fraternity of olden
days. For some examples showing that this is possible, we can look to the
Soviet Union. But let us return to M. Jules Romains: One cannot say that the
petty bourgeois has never read anything. On the contrary, he has read
everything, devoured everything. Only, his brain functions after the fashion of
certain elementary types of digestive systems. It filters. And the filter lets
through only what can nourish the thick skin of the bourgeois' clear
conscience, Before the arrival of the French in their country, the a The
responses of the celebrated Greek oracle at Dodona were revealed in the
rustling of the leaves of a sacred oak tree. The cauldron, a famous treasure of
the temple, consisted of a brass figure holding in its hand a whip made of
chains, which, when agitated by the wind, struck a brass cauldron, producing
extraordinarily ~rolonged vibrations. (Trans.) Vietnamese were people of an old
culture, exquisite and refined. To recall this fact upsets the digestion of the
Banque d9Indochine. Start the forgetting machine! These Madagascans who are
being tortured today, less than a century ago were poets, artists,
administrators? Shhhhh! Keep your lips buttoned! And silence falls, silence as
deep as a safe! Fortunately, there are still the Negroes. Ah! the Negroes!
Let's talk about the Negroes! All right, let's talk about them. About the
Sudanese empires? About the bronzes of Benin? Shango sculpture? That's all
right with me; it will give us a change from all the sensationally bad art that
adorns en many European capitals.
About African music. Why not? And about what the first explorers said, what
they saw. . . . Not those who feed at the company mangers! But the d'Elbkes,
the Marchais, the Pigafettas! And then Frobenius! Say, you know who he was,
Frobenius? And we read together: "Civilized to the marrow of their bones!
The idea of the barbaric Negro is a European invention." The petty
bourgeois doesn't want to hear any more. With a twitch of his ears he flicks
the idea away. The idea, an annoying fly. Therefore, comrade, you will hold as
enemies—loftily, lucidly, consistently—not only sadistic governors
and greedy bankers, not only prefects who torture and colonists who flog, not
only corrupt, check—licking politicians and subservient judges, but
likewise and for the same reason, venomous journalists, goitrous academicians,
wreathed in dollars and stupidity, ethnographers who go in for metaphysics,
presumptuous Belgian theologians, chattering intellectuals born stinking out of
the thigh of Nietzsche, the paternalists, the embracers, the corrupters, the
back—slappers, the lovers of exoticism, the dividers, the agrarian
sociologists, the hoodwinkers, the hoaxers, the hot—air artists, the
humbugs, and in general, all those who, performing their functions in the sordid
division of labor for the defense of Western bourgeois society, try in divers
ways and by infamous diversions to split up the forces of Progress—even
if it means denying the very possibility of Progress—all of them tools of
capitalism, all of them, openly or secretly, supporters of plundering
colonialism, all of them responsible, all hateful, all 33 34 /
Aimb
Cbsaire slave—traders, all henceforth answerable for the violence of
revolutionary action. And sweep out all the obscurers, all the inventors of
subterfuges, the charlatans and tricksters, the dealers in gobbledygook. And do
not seek to know whether personally these gentlemen are in good or bad faith,
whether personally they have good or bad intentions. Whether
personally—that is, in the private conscience of Peter or Paul—they
are or are not colonialists, because the essential thing is that their highly
problematical subjective good faith is entirely irrelevant to the objective
social implications of the evil work they perform as watchdogs of colonialism.
And in this connection, I cite as examples (purposely taken from very different
disciplines): —From Gourou, his book Les Pays tropicaux, in which, amid
certain correct observations, there is expressed the fundamental thesis, biased
and unacceptable, that there has never been a great tropical civilization, that
great civilizations have existed only in temperate climates, that in every
tropical country the germ of civilization comes, and can only come, from some
other place outside the tropics, and that if the tropical countries are not
under the biological curse of the racists, there at least hangs over them, with
the same consequences, a no less effective geographical curse. —From the
Rev. Tempels, missionary and Belgian, his "Bantu philosophy," as
slimy and fetid as one could wish, but discovered very opportunely, as Hinduism
was discovered by others, in order to counteract the "communistic
materialism" which, it seems, threatens to turn the Negroes into
"moral vagabonds." —From the historians or novelists of
civilization (it's
Discourse
on Colonialism I 35 the same
thing)—not from this one or that one, but from all of them, or almost
all—their false objectivity, their chauvinism, their sly racism, their
depraved passion for refusing to acknowledge any merit in the non—white
races, especially the black—skinned races, their obsession with
monopolizing all glory for their own race. —From the psychologists,
sociologists et al., their views on "primitivism," their rigged investigations,
their self—serving generalizations, their tendentious speculations, their
insistence on the marginal, "separate" character of the
non—whites, and—although each of these gentlemen, in order to
impugn on higher authority the weakness of primitive thought, claims that his own
is based on the firmest rationalism—their barbaric repudiation, for the
sake of the cause, of Descartes' statement, the charter of universalism, that
"reason . . . is found whole and entire in each man," and that
"where individuals of the same species are concerned, there may be degrees
in respect of their accidental qualities, but not in respect of their forms, or
natures." * But let us not go too quickly. It is worthwhile to follow a
few of these gentlemen. I shall not dwell upon the case of the historians,
neither the historians of colonization nor the Egyptologists. The case of the
former is too obvious, and as for the latter, the mechanism by which they
delude their readers has been definitively taken apart by Sheikh Anta Diop in
his book Nations nkgres et culture, the most daring book yet written by a Negro
and one which will without question play an important part in the awakening of
Africa—t 'From the opening pages of Descartes' Discours de la methods,
a translated by Arthur WoUaton in the
Penguin edition (1960). (Trms.) f See Sheikh Anta Diop, Nations n6gres et
culture, published by Let us rather
go back. To M. Gourou, to be exact. Need I say that it is from a lofty height
that the eminent scholar surveys the native populations, which "have taken
no part" in the development of modern science? And that it is not from the
effort of these populations, from their liberating struggle, from their
concrete fight for life, freedom, and culture that he expects the salvation of
the tropical countries to come, but from the good Editions Presence Africaine
(1955). Herodotus having declared that the Egyptians were originally only a
colony of the Ethiopians, and Diodorus Siculus having repeated the same thing
and agravated his offense by portraying the Ethiopians in such a way that no
mistake was possible ("PIerique omws," to quote the Latin
translation, "nigro sunt colore, facie sima, crispis capillis," Book
111, Section 8). it was of the greatest importance to mount a counterattack.
That being granted, and almost all the Western scholars having deliberately set
out to tear Egypt away from Africa, even at the risk of no longer being able to
explain it, there were several ways of accomplishing the task. Gustave Le Bon's
method, blunt brazen assertion: "The Egyptians are mites, that is to say,
whites like the Lydians, the Getulians, the Moors, the Numidians, the
Berbers"; Maspero's method, which consists of making a connection,
contrary to all probability, between the Egyptian language and the Semitic
languages, more especially the Hebrew—Aramaic type, from which follows
the conclusion that originally the Egyptians must have been Semites; Weigall's
method, geographical this time, according to which Egyptian civilization could
only have been born in Lower Egypt, and that from there it passed into Upper
Egypt, traveling up the river . . . seeing that it could not travel dom (sic).
The reader will have understood that the secret reason why this was impossible
is that Lower Egypt is near the Mediterranean, hence near the white
populations, while Upper Egypt is near the country of the Negroes. In this
connection, it is interesting to oppose to Weigall's thesis the views of
Scheinfurth (An coeur dr. l'A/nque,
vol. I) on the origin of the flora and fauna of Egypt, which he places
"hundreds of miles upriver."
Discourse
on Colonialism I 37 colonizer—since
the law states categorically that "it is cultural elements prepared in
non—tropical regions which ensure and will ensure the progress of the
tropical regions toward a larger population and a higher civilization." I
have said that M. Gourou's book contains some correct observations: "The
tropical environment and the indigenoos —societies," he writes,
drawing up the balancesheet on colonization, "have suffered from the
introduction of techniques that are ill adapted to them. from corvbes, porter
service, forced labor, slavery, from the transplanting of workers from one
region to another, sudden changes in the biological environment, and special
new conditions that are less favorable." A fine record! The look on the
university rector's face! The look on the cabinet minister's face when he reads
that! Our Gourou has slipped his leash; now we're in for it; he's going to tell
everything; he's beginning: "The typical hot countries find themselves
faced with the following dilemma: economic stagnation and protection of the
natives or temporary economic development and regression of the natives."
"Monsieur Gourou, this is very serious! I'm giving you a solemn warning:
in this game it is your career which is at stake." So our Gourou chooses
to back off and refrain from specifying that, if the dilemma exists, it exists
only within the framework of the existing regime; that if this paradox
constitutes an iron law, it is only the iron law of colonialist capitalism,
therefore of a society that is not only perishable but already in the process
of perishing. What impure and worldly geography! If there is anything better,
it is the Rev. Tempels. Let them plunder and torture in the Congo, let the Belgian
38 I Aime Cksaire colonizer seize
all the natural resources, let him stamp out all freedom, let him crush all
pride—let him go in peace, the Reverend Father Tempels consents to all
that. But take care! You are going to the Congo? Respect—I do not say native
property (the great Belgian companies might take that as a dig at them), I do
not say the freedom of the natives (the Belgian colonists might think that was
subversive talk), I do not say the Congolese nation (the Belgian government
might take it much amiss)—I say: You are going to the Congo? Respect the
Bantu philosophy! "It would be really outrageous," writes the Rev.
Tempels, "if the white educator were to insist on destroying the black
man's own. particular human spirit, which is the only reality that prevents us
from considering him as an inferior being. It would be a crime against
humanity, on the part of the colonizer, to emancipate the primitive races from
that which is valid, from that which constitutes a kernel of truth in their
traditional thought, etc." What generosity, Father! And what zeal! Now
then, know that Bantu thought is essentially ontological; that Bantu ontology
is based on the truly fundamental notions of a life force and a hierarchy of
life forces; and that for the Bantu the ontological order which defines the
world comes from God* and, as a divine decree, must be respected. Wonderful!
Everybody gains: the big companies, the colonists, the
government—everybody except the Bantu, naturally. Since Bantu thought is
ontological, the Bantu only ask O It is clear that I am not attacking the Bantu
philosophy here, but the way in which certain people try to use it for
political ends.
Discourse
on Colonialism I 39 for satisfaction
of an ontological nature. Decent wages! Comfortable housing! Food! These Bantu
are pure spirits, I tell you: "What they desire first of all and above all
is not the improvement of their economic or material situation, but the white
man's recognition of and respect for their dignity as men, their full human
value." In short, you tip your hat to the Bantu life force, you give a
wink to the immortal Bantu soul. And that's all it costs you! You have to admit
you're getting off cheap! As for the government, why should it complain? Since,
the Rev. Tempels notes with obvious satisfaction, "from their first
contact with the white men, the Bantu considered us from the only point of view
that was possible to them, the point of view of their Bantu philosophy"
and "integrated us in their hierarchy of life forces at a very high
level." In other words, arrange
it so that the white man, and particularly the Belgian, and even more
particularly Albert or Leopold, takes his place at the head of the hierarchy of
Bantu life forces, and you have done the trick. You will have brought this
miracle to pass: the Bantu god will take responsibility for the Belgian
colonialist order, and any Bantu who dares to raise his hand against it will be
guilty of sacrilege. As for M.
Mannoni, in view of his book and his observations on the Madagascan soul, he
deserves to be taken very seriously. Follow him step by step through the ins
and outs of his little conjuring tricks, and he will prove to you as clear as dav
that coloniy.ation is based on psychology, that there ——1 ———are in this world groups of men
who, for unknown reasons, suffer from what must be called a dependency complex,
that these groups are psychologically made for dependence; that they need
dependence, that they crave it, ask for it, demand it; that this is the case
with most of the colonized peoples and with the Madagascans in particular. Away
with racism! Away with colonialism! They smack too much of barbarism. M.
Mannooi has something better: psychoanalysis. Embellished with existentialism,
it gives astonishing results: the most down—at—heel cliches are
re—soled for you and made good as new; the most absurd prejudices are
explained and justified; and, as if by magic, the moon is turned into green
cheese. But listen to him: 11 is the destiny of the Occidental to face the
obligation laid down by the commandment Thou shalt leave thy father and thy
mother. This obligation is
incomprehensible to the Madagascan. At a given time in his development, every
European discovers in himself the desire . . . to break the bonds of
dependency, to become the equal of his father. The Madagascan, never! He does
not experience rivalry with the paternal authority, "manly protest,"
or Adlerian inferiority—ordeals through which the European must pass and
which are like civilized forms . . . of the initiation rites by which one
achieves manhood . . . Don't let the subtleties of vocabulary, the new
terminology, frighten you! You know the old refrain:
"TheNegroes—are—big—children." They take it, they
dress it up for you, tangle it up for you. The result is Mannoni. Once again,
be reassured! At the start of the journey it may seem a bit difficult, but once
you get there, you'll see, you will find all your baggage again. Nothing will
be missing, not even the famous white man's burden. Therefore, give Discour&e on Colonialism I 41 ear: "Through these ordeals" (reserved for
the Occidental), "one triumphs over the infantile fear of abandonment and
acquires freedom and autonomy, which are the most precious possessions and also
the burdens of the Occidental.'' And the Madagascan? you ask. A lying race of
bondsmen, Kipling would say. Mi Mannoni makes his diagnosis: "The
Madagascan does not even try to imagine such a situation of abandonment. . . . He
desires neither personal autonomy nor free responsibility." (Come on, you
know how it is. These Negroes can't even imagine what freedom is. They don't
want it, they don't demand it. It's the white agitators who put that into their
heads. And if you gave it to them, they wouldn't know what to do with it.) If
you point out to M. Mannoni that the Madagascans have nevertheless revolted
several times since the French occupation and again recently in 1947, M.
Mannoni, faithful to his premises, will explain to you that that is purely
neurotic behavior, a collective madness, a running amok; that, moreover, in
this case it was not a question of the Madagascans' setting out to conquer real
objectives but an "imaginary security:' which obviously implies that the
oppression of which they complain is an imaginary oppression. So clearly, so
insanely imaginary, that one might even speak of monstrous ingratitude,
according to the classic example of the Fijian who burns the dryingshed of the
captain who has cured him of his wounds. If you criticize the colonialism that
drives the most peaceable populations to despair, M. Mannoni will explain to
you that after all, the ones responsible are not the colonialist whites but the colonized Madagascans. Damn it all, they took
the whites for gods and expected of them everything one expects of the
divinity! 42 /
Aimb
Cbsaire If you think the treatment
applied to the Madagascan neurosis was a trifle rough, M. Mannoni, who has an
answer for everything, will prove to you that the famous brutalities people
talk about have been very greatly exaggerated, that it is all neurotic
fabrication, that the tortures were imaginary tortures applied by
"imaginary executioners." As for the French government, it showed
itself singularly moderate, since it was content to arrest the Madagascan
deputies, when it should have sacrificed them, if it had wanted to respect the laws of a healthy psychology. I
am not exaggerating. It is M. Mannoni speaking: Treading very classical paths,
these Madagascans transformed their saints into martyrs, their saviors into
scapegoats; they wanted to wash their imaginary sins in the blood of their own
gods. They were prepared, even at this price, or rather only at this price, to reverse their attitude once more. One feature of
this dependent psychology would seem to be that, since no one can serve two masters,
one of the two should be sacrificed to
the other. The most agitated of the colonialists in Tananarive had a confused
understanding of the essence of this psychology of sacrifice, and they demanded
their victims. They besieged the High Commissioner's office, assuring him that
if they were granted the blood of a few innocents, "everyone would be
satisfied." This attitude, disgraceful from a human point of view, was based
on what was, on the whole, a fairly accurate perception of the emotional disturbances that the population
of the high plateaux was going through. Obviously,
it is only a step from this to absolving the bloodthirsty colonialists. M.
Mannoni's "psychology" is as "disinterested," as
"free," as M. Gourou's geography or the Rev. Tempels' missionary
theology!
Discourse
on Colonialism I 43 And the striking
thing they all have in common is the persistent bourgeois attempt to reduce the
most human problems to comfortable, hollow notions: the idea of the dependency complex in Mannoni, the ontological idea
in the Rev. Tempels, the idea of "tropicality" in Gourou. What has become
of the Banque d'lndochine in all that? And the Banque de Madagascar? And the
bullwhip? And the taxes? And the handful of rice to the Madagascan or the nhaqub?
And the martyrs? And the innocent
people murdered? And the blood—stained money piling up in your coffers,
gentlemen? They have evaporated! Disappeared, intermingled, become
unrecognizable in the realm of pale ratiocinations. But there is one
unfortunate thing for these gentlemen. It is that their bourgeois masters are
less and less responsive to a tricky argument and are condemned increasingly to
turn away from them and applaud others who are less subtle and more brutal.
That is precisely what gives M. Yves Florenne a chance. And indeed, here,
neatly arranged on the tray of the newspaper Le Monde, are his little offers of service. No possible
surprises. Completely guaranteed, with proven efficacy, fully tested with
conclusive results, here we have a form of racism, a French racism still not
very sturdy, it is true, but promising. Listen to the man himself: "Our
reader" (a teacher who has had the audacity to it contradict the irascible
M. Florenne), . . . contemplating two young half—breed girls, her pupils,
has a sense of pride at the feeling that there is a growing measure of
integration with our French family. .
. . Would her re* The name given by the French to the people of Indochina (cf.
U.S. "gook"). (Trans.) sponse be the same if she saw, in reverse,
France being integrated into the black family (or the yellow or red, it makes
no difference), that is to say, becoming diluted, disappearing?" It is
clear that for M. Yves Florenne it is blood that makes France, and the
foundations of the nation are biological: "Its people, its genius, are
made of a thousandyear—old equilibrium that is at the same time vigorous
and delicate, and . . . certain alarming disturbances of this equilibrium
coincide with the massive and often dangerous infusion of foreign blood which
it has had to undergo over the last thirty years." In short,
cross—breeding—that is the enemy. No more social crises! No more
economic crises! All that is left are racial crises! Of course, humanism loses
none of its prestige (we are in the Western world), but let us understand each
other: "It is not by losing itself in the human universe, with its blood
and its spirit, that France will be universal, it is by remaining itself."
That is what the French bourgeoisie has come to, five years after the defeat of
Hitler! And it is precisely in that that its historic punishment lies: to be
condemned, returning to it as though driven by a vice, to chew over Hitler's
vomit. Because after all, M. Yves Florenne was still fussing over peasant
novels, "dramas of the land," and stories of the evil eye when, with
a far more evil eye than the rustic hero of some tale of witchcraft, Hitler was
announcing: "The supreme goal of the People—State is to preserve the
original elements of the race which, by spreading culture, create the beauty
and dignity of a superior humanity." M. Yves Florenne is aware of this
direct descent. And he is far from being embarrassed by it.
Discourse
on Colonialism I 45 Fine. That's his
right. As it is not our right to be indignant about it. Because, after all, we
must resign ourselves to the inevitable and say to ourselves, once for all,
that the bourgeoisie is condemned to become every day more snarling, more
openly ferocious, more shameless, more summarily barbarous; that it is an
implacable law that every decadent class finds itself turned into a receptacle
into which there flow all the dirty waters of history; that it is a universal
law that before it disappears, every class must first disgrace itself
completely, on all fronts, and that it is with their heads buried in the
dunghill that dying societies utter their swan songs. The dossier is indeed
overwhelming, A beast that by the elementary exercise of its vitality spills
blood and sows death—you remember that historically it was in the form of
this fierce archetype that capitalist society first revealed itself to the best
minds and consciences. Since then the animal has become anemic, it is losing
its hair, its hide is no longer glossy, but the ferocity has remained, barely
mixed with sadism. It is easy to blame it on Hitler. On Rosenberg. On Junger
and the others. On the SS. But what about this: "Everything in this world
reeks of crime: the newspaper, the wall, the countenance of man."
Baudelaire said that. before Hitler was born! Which proves that the evil has a
deeper source. And Isidore Ducasse, Comte de Lautrkamont! " O Isidore Ducasse—the title Comte de Lautrbamont
is a pen name —was a precursor of surrealism who, unknown during his
brief life46 Discourse on Colonialism / 47 In this connection, it is high time
to dissipate the atmosphere of scandal that has been created around the Chants
de Mul~ror. Monstrosity? Literary meteorite? Delirium of a sick imagination?
Come, now! How convenient it is! The truth is that Lautrkamont had only to look
the iron man forged by capitalist society squarely in the eye to perceive the
monster, the everyday monster, his hero. No one denies the veracity of Balzac.
But wait a moment: take Vautrin, let him be just back from the tropics, give
him the wings of the archangel and the shivers of malaria, let him be
accompanied through the streets of Paris by an escort of Uruguayan vampires and
carnivorous ants, and you will have Maldoror." The setting is changed, but
it is the same world, the same man, hard, inflexible, unscrupulous, fond, if
ever a man was, of "the flesh of other men." To digress for a moment
within my digression, I be— —time (1846—1870) had great
influence on a later generation of poets. He is remembered for a single
extraordinary work, the Chants de Maldorm, a kind of epic poem in prose whose satanic hero is in
violent rebellion against God and society. The disconnected episodes through
which Maldoror passes are a series of fantastic visions, occasionally mystic
and lyrical, more often grotesque, macabre and erotic, filled with sadism and
vampirism. The work as a whole has the intensity of a nightmare and seems
almost to spring directly from the author's subconscious. Guy Wernham's English
translation (1944) is still available. (Trans.) * Vautrin, who appears in Le
Pire Goriot (1834) and other novels,
is the arch—villain of Balzac's COmedie humaine. A master criminal living under the guise of a former
tradesman, he is corrupt, unscrupulous and single—minded in his pursuit
of fortune. With cynical insight into capitalist society, Vautrin sees himself
as no more immoral than the respectable bourgeois of his time. (Trans.) lieve
that the day will come when, with all the elements gathered together, all the
sources analyzed, all the circumstances of the work elucidated, it will be
possible to give the Chants de Maldoror
a materialistic and historical interpretation which will bring to light an
altogether unrecognized aspect of this frenzied epic, its implacable
denunciation of a very particular form of society, as it could not escape the
sharpest eyes around the year 1865. Before that, of course, we will have had to
clear away the occultist and metaphysical commentaries that obscure the path;
to re—establish the importance of certain neglected stanzas—for example,
that strangest passage of all, the one concerning the mine of lice, in which we
will consent to see nothing more or less than the denunciation of the evil
power of gold and the hoarding up of money; to restore to its true place the
admirable episode of the omnibus, and be willing to find in it very simply what
is there, to wit, the scarcely allegorical picture of a society in which the
privileged, comfortably seated, refuse to move closer together so as to make
room for the new arrival. And—be it said in passing—who welcomes
the child who has been callously rejected? The people! Represented here by the
ragpicker. Baudelaire's ragpicker: Paying no heed to the spies of the cops, his
thralls, He pours his heart out in stupendous schemes. He takes great oaths and
dictates sublime laws, Casts down the wicked, aids the victims' cause.* Then it
will be understood, will it not, that the enemy whom Lautrkamont has made the
enemy, the cannibalistic, brain—devouring "Creator," the sadist
perched on "a * From "Le Vin des chiffonniers" in Les Flews du mul, as
translated by C. F. MacIntyre.
(Trans.)
Discourse
on Colonialism I 49 throne made of
human excrement and gold," the hypocrite, the debauchee, the idler who
"eats the bread of others" and who from time to time is found dead
drunk, "drunk as a bedbug that has swallowed three barrels of blood during
the night," it will be understood that it is not beyond the clouds that
one must look for that creator, but that we are more likely to find him in
Desfossks' business directory and on some comfortable executive board! But let
that be. The moralists can do nothing about it. Whether one likes it or not,
the bourgeoisie, as a class, is condemned to take responsibility for all the
barbarism of history, the tortures of the Middle Ages and the Inquisition,
warmongering and the appeal to the raison d'Etat, racism and slavery, in short
everything against which it protested in unforgettable terms at the time when,
as the attacking class, it was the incarnation of human progress. The moralists
can do nothing about it. There is a law of progressive dehumanization in
accordance with which henceforth on the agenda of the bourgeoisie there isthere
can be—nothing but violence, corruption, and barbarism. I almost forgot
hatred, lying, conceit. I almost forgot M. Roger Caillois." Well then: M.
Caillois, who from time immemorial has been given the mission to teach a lax
and slipshod age rigorous thought and dignified style, M. Caillois, therefore,
has just been moved to mighty wrath. Why? Because of the great betrayal of
Western ethnography * See Roger Caillois, "Illusions A rebours," Nouve& Revue Franwise, December and January 1955. which, with a
deplorable deterioration of its sense of responsibility, has been using all its
ingenuity of late to cast doubt upon the overall superiority of Western
civilization over the exotic civilizations. Now at last M. Caillois takes the
field. Europe has this capacity for raising up heroic saviors at the most
critical moments. It is unpardonable on our part not to remember M. Massis,
who, around 1927, embarked on a crusade for the defense of the West. We want to
make sure that a better fate is in store for M. Caillois, who, in order to
defend the same sacred cause, transforms his pen into a good Toledo dagger.
What did M. Massis say? He deplored the fact that "the destiny of Western
civilization, and indeed the destiny of man," were now threatened; that an
attempt was being made on all sides "to appeal to our anxieties, to
challenge the claims made for our culture, to call into question the most
essential part of what we possess," and he swore to make war upon these
"disastrous prophets." M. Caillois identifies the enemy no
differently. It is those "European intellectuals" who for the last
fifty years, "because of exceptionally sharp disappointment and
bitterness," have relentlessly "repudiated the various ideals of
their culture," and who by so doing maintain, "especially in Europe,
a tenacious malaise." It is this malaise, this anxiety, which M. Caillois,
for his part, means to put an end to." O It is significant that at the very time when M. Caillois
was launching his crusade, a Belgian colonialist review inspired by the
government (Europe—Afrique, no.
6, January 1955), was making an absolutely identical attack on ethnography:
"Formerly, the colonizer's fundamental conception of his relationship to
the colonized man was that of Discourse on Colonialism / 51 And
indeed, no personage since the Englishman of the Victorian age has ever
surveyed history with a conscience more serene and less clouded with doubt. His
doctrine? It has the virtue of simplicity. That the West invented science. That
the West alone knows how to think; that at the borders of the Western world
there begins the shadowy realm of primitive thinking, which, dominated by the
notion of participation, incapable of logic, is the very model of faulty
thinking. At this point one gives a start. One reminds M. Caillois that the
famous law of participation invented by LevyBruhl was repudiated by
Levy—Bruhl himself; that in the a civilized man to a savage. Thus
colonization rested on a hierarchy, crude no doubt, but firm and clear."
It is this hierarchical relationship that the author of the article, a certain
M. Piron, accuses ethnography of destroying. Like M. Caillois, he blames Michel
Leiris and Claude Levi—Strauss. He reproaches the former for having
written, in his pamphlet La Question raciale devant la science modeme: "It is childish to try to set up a hierarchy of
culture." The latter for having attacked "false evolutionism,"
because it "tries to suppress the diversity of cultures, by considering
them as stages in a single development which, starting from the same point,
should make them converge toward the same goal." Mircea Eliade comes in
for special treatment for having dared to write the following: "The
European no longer has natives before him, but interlocutors. It is well to
know how to begin the dialogue; it is indispensable to recognize that there no
longer exists a solution of continuity between the so—called primitive or
backward world and the modem Western world." Lastly, it is for excessive
egalitarianism, for once, that American thinkers are taken to task—Otto
Klineberg, professor of psychology at Columbia University, having declared:
"It is a fundamental error to consider the other cultures as inferior to
our own simply because they are different." Decidedly, M. Caillois is in
good company. evening of his life he proclaimed to the world that he had been
wrong in "trying to define a characteristic that was peculiar to the
primitive mentality so far as logic was concerned"; that, on the contrary,
he had become convinced that "these minds do not differ from ours at all
from the point of view of logic. . . . Therefore, [that they] cannot tolerate a
formal contradiction any more than we can. . . . Therefore, [that they] reject
as we do, by a kind of mental reflex, that which is logically impossible."
* A waste of time! M. Caillois considers the rectification to be null and void.
For M. Caillois, the true Levy—Bruhl can only be the Levy—Bruhl who
says that primitive man talks raving nonsense. Of course, there remain a few
small facts that resist this doctrine. To wit, the invention of arithmetic and
geometry by the Egyptians. To wit, the discovery of astronomy by the Assyrians.
To wit, the birth of chemistry among the Arabs. To wit, the appearance of
rationalism in Islam at a time when Western thought had a furiously
pre—logical cast to it. But M. Caillois soon puts these impertinent
details in their place, since it is a strict principle that "a discovery
which does not fit into a whole" is, precisely, only a detail, that is to
say, a negligible nothing. As you can imagine, once off to such a good start,
M. Caillois doesn't stop half way. Having annexed science, he's going to claim
ethics too. Just think of it! M. Caillois has never eaten anyone! M. Caillois
has never dreamed of finishing off an invalid! It has never occurred to M.
Caillois to shorten the days of * Les Carnets o!e Lucien Lhj—Bmhl, Presses Universitaires de France, 1949.
Discourse
on Colonialism I 53 his aged
parents! Well, there you have it, the superiority of the West: "That
discipline of life which tries to ensure that the human person is sufficiently
respected so that it is not considered normal to eliminate the old and the
infirm." The conclusion is inescapable: compared to the cannibals, the
dismemberers, and other lesser breeds, Europe and the West are the incarnation
of respect for human dignity. But let us move on, and quickly, lest our
thoughts wander to Algiers, Morocco, and other places where, as I write these
very words, so many valiant sons of the West, in the semi—darkness of
dungeons, are lavishing upon their inferior African brothers, with such
tireless attention, those authentic marks of respect for human dignity which
are called, in technical terms, "electricity," "the
bathtub," and "the bottleneck." Let us press on: M. Caillois has
not yet reached the end of his list of outstanding achievements. After
scientific superiority and moral superiority comes religious superiority. Here,
M. Caillois is careful not to let 'himself be deceived by the empty prestige of
the Orient. Asia, mother of gods, perhaps. Anyway, Europe, mistress of rites.
And see how wonderful: on the one hand—outside of Europe
—ceremonies of the voodoo type, with all their "ludicrous
masquerade, their collective frenzy, their wild alcoholism, their crude
exploitation of a naive fervor," and on the other hand—in
Europe—those authentic values which Chateaubriand was already celebrating
in his Genie du Christianisme: "The dogmas and mysteries of the Catholic
religion, its liturgy, the symbolism of its sculptors and the glory of the
plainsong." 54 I Aim6 Cksaire Lastly,
a final cause for satisfaction: Gobineau said: "The only history is
white." M. Caillois, in turn, observes: "The only ethnography is
white." It is the West that studies the ethnography of the others, not the
others who study the ethnography of the West. A cause for the greatest
jubilation, is it not? And the museums of which M. Caillois is so proud, not
for one minute does it cross his mind that, all things considered, it would
have been better not to have needed them; that Europe would have done better to
tolerate the non—European civilizations at its side, leaving them alive,
dynamic and prosperous, whole and not mutilated; that it would have been better
to let them develop and fulfill themselves than to present for our admiration,
duly labelled, their dead and scattered parts; that anyway, the museum by itself
is nothing; that it means nothing, that it can say nothing, when smug
self—satisfaction rots the eyes, when a secret contempt for others
withers the heart, when racism, admitted or not, dries up sympathy; that it
means nothing if its only purpose is to feed the delights of vanity; that after
all, the honest contemporary of Saint Louis, who fought Islam but respected it,
had a better chance of knowing it than do our contemporaries (even if they have
a smattering of ethnographic literature), who despise it. No, in the scales of
knowledge all the museums in the world will never weigh so much as one spark of
human sympathy. And what is the conclusion of all that? Let us be fair; M.
Caillois is moderate. Having established the superiority of the West in all
fields, and having thus re—established a wholesome and
Discourse
on Colonialism I 55 extremely
valuable hierarchy, M. Caillois gives an immediate proof of this superiority by
concluding that no one should be exterminated. With him the Negroes are sure
that they will not be lynched, the Jews that they will not feed new bonfires.
There is just one thing: it is important for it to be clearly understood that
the Negroes, Jews, Australians owe this tolerance not to their respective
merits, but to the magnanimity of M. Caillois, not to the dictates of science,
which can offer only ephemeral truths, but to a decree of M. Caillois'
conscience, which can only be absolute; that this tolerance has no conditions,
no guarantees, unless it be M. Caillois' sense of duty to himself. Perhaps
science will one day declare that the backward cultures and retarded peoples
that constitute so many dead weights and impedimenta on humanity's path must be
cleared away, but we are assured that at the critical moment the conscience of
M. Caillois, transformed on the spot from a clear conscience into a noble
conscience, will arrest the executioner's arm and pronounce the salous sis. To which we are indebted for the following juicy note:
For me, the question of the equality of races, peoples, or cultures has meaning
only if we are talking about an equality in law, not an equality in fact. In
the same way, men who are blind, maimed, sick, feeble—minded, ignorant,
or poor [one could hardly be nicer to the non—Occidentals] are not
respectively equal, in the material sense of the word, to those who are strong,
clear—sighted, whole, healthy, intelligent, cultured, or rich. The latter
have greater capacities which, by the way, do not give them more rights but
only more duties. . . . Similarly, whether for biological or historical
reasons, there exist at present differences in level, power, and value among
the various cultures. These differences entail an inequality in fact. They in
no way justify an inequality of rights in favor of the so—called superior
peoples, as racism would have it. Rather, they confer upon them additional
tasks and an increased responsibility. Additional tasks? What are they, if not
the tasks of ruling the world? Increased responsibility? What is it, if not
responsibility for the world? And Caillois—Atlas charitably plants his
feet firmly in the dust and once again raises to his sturdy shoulders the
inevitable white man's burden. The reader must excuse me for having talked
about M. Caillois at such length. It is not that I overestimate to any degree
whatever the intrinsic value of his "philosophy"the reader will have
been able to judge how seriously one should take a thinker who, while claiming
to be dedicated to rigorous logic, sacrifices so willingly to prejudice and
wallows so voluptuously in cliches. But his views are worth special attention
because they are significant. Significant of what? Of the state of mind of
thousands upon thousands of Europeans or, to be very precise, of the state of
mind of the Western petty bourgeoisie. Significant of what? Of this: that at
the very time when it most often mouths the word, the West has never been
further from being able to live a true humanism—a humanism made to the
measure of the world. One of the values invented by the bourgeoisie in former
times and launched throughout the world was man~and we have seen what has
become of that. The other was the nation. It is a fact: the nation is a bourgeois phenomenon. Exactly; but if I turn my
attention from man to nations, I note that here too there is great danger; that
colonial enterprise is to the modern world what Roman imperialism was to the
ancient world: the prelude to Disaster and the forerunner of Catastrophe. Come,
now! The Indians massacred, the Moslem world drained of itself, the Chinese
world defiled and perverted for a good century; the Negro world disqualified;
mighty voices stilled forever; homes scattered to the wind; all this wreckage,
all this waste, humanity reduced to a monologue, and you think that all that
does not have its price? The truth is that this policy cannot but bring about the ruin of Europe itself, and that Europe, if it is not careful, will perish
from the void it has created around itself. They thought they were only
slaughtering Indians, or 58 / Aim& Cesaire Hindus, or South Sea islanders,
or Africans. They have in fact overthrown, one after another, the ramparts
behind which European civilization could have developed freely. I know how
fallacious historical parallels are, particularly the one I am about to draw.
Nevertheless, permit me to quote a page from Edgar Quinet for the not
inconsiderable element of truth which it contains and which is worth pondering.
Here it is: People ask why barbarism emerged all at once in ancient
civilization. I believe I know the answer. It is surprising that so simple a
cause is not obvious to everyone. The system of ancient civilization was
composed of a certain number of nationalities, of countries which, although
they seemed to be enemies, or were even ignorant of each other, protected,
supported, and guarded one another. When the expanding Roman empire undertook
to conquer and destroy these groups of nations, the dazzled sophists thought
they saw at the end of this road humanity triumphant in Rome. They talked about
the unity of the human spirit; it was only a dream. It happened that these
nationalities were so many bulwarks protecting Rome itself. . . . Thus when
Rome, in its alleged triumphal march toward a single civilization, had
destroyed, one after the other, Carthage, Egypt, Greece, Judea, Persia, Dacia,
and Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul, it came to pass that it had itself
swallowed up the dikes that protected it against the human ocean under which it
was to perish. The magnanimous Caesar, by crushing the two Gauls, only paved
the way for the Teutons. So many societies, so many languages extinguished, so
many cities, rights, homes annihilated, created a void around Rome, and in
those places which were not invaded by the barbarians, barbarism was born
spontaneously. The vanquished Gauls changed into Discourse on Colonialism / 59
Bagaudes. Thus the violent downfall, the progressive extirpation of individual
cities, caused the crumbling of ancient civilization. That social edifice was
supported by the various nationalities as by so many different columns of
marble or porphyry. When, to the applause of the wise men of the time, each of
these living columns had been demolished, the edifice came crashing down; and
the wise men of our day are still trying to understand how such mighty ruins
could have been made in a moment's time. And now I ask: what else has bourgeois
Europe done? It has undermined civilizations, destroyed countries, ruined
nationalities, extirpated "the root of diversity." No more dikes, no
more bulwarks. The hour of the barbarian is at hand. The modern barbarian. The
American hour. Violence, excess, waste, mercantilism, bluff, gregariousness,
stupidity, vulgarity, disorder. In 1913, Ambassador Page wrote to Wilson:
"The future of the world belongs to us. . . . Now what are we going to do
with the leadership of the world presently when it clearly falls into our
hands?" And in 1914: "What are we going to do with this England and
this Empire, presently, when economic forces unmistakably put the leadership of
the race in our hands?" This Empire . . . And the others . . , And indeed,
do you not see how ostentatiously these gentlemen have just unfurled the banner
of anti—colonialism? "Aid to the disinherited countries," says
Truman. "The time of the old colonialism has passed." That's also
Truman. Which means that American high finance considers 60 I Aim&
Cbsaire that the time has come to
raid every colony in the world. So, dear friends, here you have to be careful!
I know that some of you, disgusted with Europe, with all that hideous mess
which you did not witness by choice, are turning—oh! in no great
numbers—toward America and getting used to looking upon that country as a
possible liberator. "What a godsend!" you think. "The
bulldozers! The massive investments of capital! The roads! The ports!" '6 But
American racism!" "So what? European racism in the colonies has
inured us to it!" And there we are, ready to run the great Yankee risk.
So, once again, be careful! American domination—the only dominatioit from
which one never recovers. I mean from which oi~e~never recovers unscarred. And
since you are talking about factories and industries, do you not see the
tremendous factory hysterically spitting out its cinders in the heart of our
forests or deep in the bush, the factory for the production of lackeys; do you
not see the prodigious mechanization, the mechanization of man; the gigantic
rape of everything inti , Ti2e undamaged, undefiled that, despoiled as we
are,,.Soiir human spirit has still managed to preserve; the machine, yes, have
you never seen it, the machine for crushing, for grinding, for degrading
peoples? So that the danger is immense. So that unless, in Africa, in the South
Sea islands, in Madagascar (that is, at the gates of South Africa), in the West
Indies (that is, at the gates of America), Western Europe undertakes on its own
initiative a policy of na
Discourse
on Colonialism I 61 tionalities, a
new policy founded on respect for peoples and cultures—nay,
more—unless Europe galvanizes the dying cultures or raises up new ones,
unless it becomes the awakener of countries and civilizations (this being said
without taking into account the admirable resistance of the colonial peoples
primarily symbolized at present by Vietnam, but also by the Africa of the Rassemblement
Dkmocratique Africain), Europe will have deprived itself of its last chance
and, with its own hands, drawn up over itself the pall of mortal darkness.
Which comes down to saying that the salvation of Europe is not a matter of a
revolution in methods. It is a matter of the Revolution—the one which,
until such time as there is a classless society, will substitute for the narrow
tyranny of a dehumanized bourgeoisie the preponderance of the only class that
still has a universal mission, because it suffers in its flesh from all the
wrongs of history, from all the universal wrongs: the proletariat. END