Geographers and other social scientists have largely neglected Malcolm X as a critical theorist. Unlike the attention accorded to Franz Fanon, the writings and speeches of Malcolm X have remained unexplored for their potential contribution to political geographic thought. As a corrective, in this paper we situate Malcolm X within the rubric of critical geopolitics and postcolonial theory. We contend that Malcolm X, during the last year of his life, was formulating a geopolitics of oppression. We further assert that the geopolitics of Malcolm X were decidedly critical and anti-colonial, and that his discourse foreshadows elements of contemporary social theory. Specifically, Malcolm X instructed his audiences to educate themselves about the relationships between imperial power and he addressed the politics of representation by re-presenting the issues of American racial oppression as one of global oppression. © 2004 Editorial Board of Antipode.
CITATION STYLE
Tyner, J. A., & Kruse, R. J. (2004). The geopolitics of Malcolm X. Antipode. Blackwell Publishing Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2004.00380.x
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