
Guerrilla History Frantz Fanon: The Life and Works w/ Lou Turner (AR&D Ep.12)
Nov 28, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Lou Turner, a Clinical Professor in Urban and Regional Planning and a Fanon scholar, examines Frantz Fanon's profound impact on decolonization and mental health. He shares his early encounters with Fanon's texts and highlights his influence on American Black movements. Turner delves into Fanon's life, from his traumatic wartime experiences to his groundbreaking psychological approaches. Insightful reflections on Fanon’s dual role as a cultural therapist and revolutionary thinker reveal a complex legacy still relevant today.
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Fanon Found His First Home In U.S. Black Movements
- Lou Turner first read Frantz Fanon in 1968 as a high-school senior and again at Howard University during the Black student movement.
- He credits Fanon as having his first major home in the U.S. Black movement rather than France or Martinique.
Sociotherapy Linked Clinic To Community
- Fanon developed 'sociotherapy' in clinical practice, integrating patients back into their communities as therapy.
- This clinical method shaped his view that psychiatry must account for sociohistorical and cultural contexts.
Clinic Innovations: Gardens, Cafés, Storytellers
- At Blida-Joinville Hospital Fanon introduced culturally rooted therapies like gardens, cafés and storytellers to engage patients.
- He replaced failed Western tests with practices that reinstated indigenous social life into treatment.









