

Zahi Zalloua, "The Politics of the Wretched: Race, Reason, and Ressentiment" (Bloomsbury, 2024)
Feb 7, 2025
Zahi Zalloua, a prominent professor of Philosophy and Literature at Whitman College, delves into the transformative power of ressentiment in his latest work. He reframes ressentiment from a personal frustration into a collective call for change, challenging conventional notions of identity and victimhood. Zalloua highlights the role of race and class in social movements like Black Lives Matter and critiques elite capture in activism. Through these discussions, he urges marginalized groups to unite their grievances, emphasizing the potential for solidarity in the fight against systemic injustices.
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Politics of the Wretched
- The "wretched" are those excluded and deemed unimportant by society, not a fixed group.
- Their politics represent a reasoned resistance to injustice, not irrational violence.
Private vs. Public Ressentiment
- Zahi Zalloua distinguishes between private and public ressentiment, diverging from Nietzsche's purely negative view.
- Public ressentiment transforms personal frustration into a collective "no" for a universal cause.
Zone of Non-Being
- Fanon's "zone of non-being" describes the existential freedom found in a dissolved social ego.
- Black individuals often experience only the destruction of subjectivity, not the freedom.