

Adam Shatz: RESISTANCE TO INJUSTICE
Tessa Szyszkowitz in conversation with Adam Shatz
RESISTANCE TO INJUSTICE
From Frantz Fanon to Solidarity Encampments at US-UniversitiesLessons to learn from Protest Movements
When Adam Shatz, US editor of the London Review of Books, researched his biography of Frantz Fanon “The Rebel’s Clinic”, he could not have known how topical the exploration of the rebel’s thinking would be in 2024. The psychiatrist and political philosopher was a militant, opposing French colonial rule in Algeria. A highly sensitive topic given the heated debate at Western universities about October 7th and the war in Gaza. Fanon died early at the age of 36, but his call for justice for the oppressed of colonialist powers in his book „The Wretched of the Earth“(in German “Die Verdammten dieser Erde”) is still heard, whenever the question arises: How to oppose injustice?
Not with Hamas style violence, of course. There are other powerful forms of protest. As Adam Shatz writes in The London Review of Books in his recent essay “Israel’s descent” we now see a new protest movement which might be the most consequential wave of resistance so far as it happens in the middle of Western society: Among the students are many young Jews who do not want to identify with an explicitly illiberal state like Israel. While Shatz is aware of the danger of radicalization among the protesters, he states: “The birth of a global movement in opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza and in defence of Palestinians rights, is, if nothing else, a sign that Israel has lost the moral war among people of conscience.”
Adam Shatz is an author, the US editor of The London Review of Books and a contributor to The New York Times Magazine, The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, and other publications. He is also a visiting professor at Bard College, and the host of the podcast “Myself with Others,” produced by the pianist Richard Sears.
Tessa Szyszkowitz is an Austrian journalist and author. A UK correspondent for Austrian and German publications such as Falter or Tagesspiegel, she curates Philoxenia at Kreiskyforum and she is a Distinguished Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute in London.