This paper traces Fanon’s radical insights within South African intellectual traditions, exploring how thinkers like Biko and Manganyi reinterpreted Fanonian praxis into local embodied practice. Through collaborative writing and fieldwork, we examine how Fanon’s legacy continues as dialogue shaping liberatory group analytic practice. We highlight generational transmission through oral histories, healing practices, and political consciousness movements, reflecting the social unconscious in culture. These embodied responses (rituals, storytelling, and collective mourning) emerged as acts of resistance and healing, aligning with group analytic principles while offering local expressions of communal well-being. Biko and Manganyi translated Fanonian thought into a South African aligned with Ubuntu ethics, informing our approach to the collectively experienced social unconscious. We demonstrate practice operating from epistemic confidence, neither marginal nor derivative but self-authorised. This paper invites practitioners to listen beyond theory to rhythms, rituals, and relational wisdom in everyday life as foundational to an emancipatory group analytic practice.
Bobat et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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