Discourse on Colonialism

by

Aimé Césaire

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Discourse on Colonialism makes teaching easy.

Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe Theme Icon
The Consequences of Colonial Plunder Theme Icon
Scholarship and Power Theme Icon
Class Struggle and Revolution Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Discourse on Colonialism, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe Theme Icon

Written in 1950, just after World War II and at the height of the third wave of Western European colonialism, Martinican intellectual Aimé Césaire’s Discourse on Colonialism indicts Europe for brutalizing the rest of the world in pursuit of its own self-interest. However, Césaire also highlights how colonialism degraded Europe itself: by forcing Europeans to justify their inhuman brutality toward non-European nations, colonialism degraded the moral culture of European societies and baked racism into their core. This is why Césaire believes that, now, “Europe is indefensible”: in an attempt to justify its colonial exploits, European culture has turned the indiscriminate slaughter of nonwhite people into a routine part of everyday life. World War II provided undeniable evidence of this; for Césaire, the horrific violence of the Holocaust was an extension of the nationalist expansionism, profoundly racist culture, and celebration of genocide that characterized European culture and policy for centuries. In other words, Hitler was not an exception in European history, but rather a symptom of the “morally diseased” culture, created by and through colonization, that continues to control the global order today.

Césaire argues that profit-seeking was the seed of colonization’s brutality: it showed Europeans that they could achieve their goals by terrorizing native populations through tactics like genocide, mass rape, and forced labor. At the beginning of the Discourse on Colonialism, Césaire makes it clear that colonization’s real purpose was economic. Explorers were “swindlers, perjurers, forgers, thieves, and procurers” looking to make a fortune, and they enslaved, murdered, raped, and displaced native people to gain control over resources. After they took formal control over colonized territories, European governments started using the same strategies: they institutionalized exploitative labor relations and justified brutal violence, up to and including mass murder, in order to protect their profits and power. However, over time, senseless cruelty stopped being a mere means to profit and started becoming the very point of colonization for Europeans, who reveled in the opportunity to completely dominate other people through senseless violence. Césaire offers various examples of this: for instance, he recalls how a French conqueror collected prisoners’ ears as souvenirs and how another reported being “intoxicated by the smell of blood” while massacring women and children.

In order to morally justify the brutal violence inflicted by explorers and officials overseas, the European ruling class (or bourgeoisie) developed a complex system of racist, white supremacist beliefs that recast colonial rule as inherently good. This blinded Europeans to the humanity of the people that their governments were systematically murdering and enslaving. Some Europeans decided that nonwhite people were inherently “inferior” and “degenerate,” and so needed to be controlled by European “civilization.” Others celebrated colonialism for giving white men a way to take out their worst, most violent impulses on nonwhite people whose lives supposedly had no intrinsic value. Regardless of which specific theory they chose, Europeans’ strategy was to create a hierarchy of human worth, place white people at the top, and therefore argue that profit and power for white people really do matter more than the lives, freedom, and sovereignty of nonwhite people, whom Europeans saw as more like animals or objects than human beings. To this effect, Césaire summarizes the culture of colonialism with a famous equation: “colonization = ‘thingification.’” This “thingification” of colonized people was the only way that colonizing European countries could justify their morally horrendous crimes to themselves.

However, Césaire shows how Europeans also “decivilize” and “brutalize” themselves by blinding themselves to the humanity of non-European people, and he argues that this aspect of colonial culture led directly to the most memorable horror of the 20th century: the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. Césaire frequently points out that the Nazis were not unique: white supremacy was the rule, not the exception, in early 20th-century Europe and North America. He quotes several prominent Frenchmen who openly declare that white people are inherently superior to nonwhite people and should therefore rule the world—but tellingly, none of them provide any evidence for their beliefs. Even scientists took white supremacy as a basic assumption, rather than a hypothesis to prove, which shows how it was deeply embedded in 20th-century European and American culture. “Thousands upon thousands of Europeans” who had never met someone from outside their continent simply assumed that Césaire and people like him were incapable of rational thought or self-government and that it was Europe’s destiny to “civilize” the world through violence. This is why Césaire considers European culture “decadent,” “sick,” and “dying”: its survival depends on the destruction of other groups. Eventually, during World War II, Nazi Germany turned standard “colonialist procedures” against a group that happened to live within Europe.

Césaire saw the Holocaust as evidence that European political, intellectual, and military culture had rotted to the core, but he did not think it signaled the end of this culture. Rather, he believed that colonial violence would continue to dominate the world into the foreseeable future, most of all through the growing global power of the United States. Césaire emphasizes that colonialism is not over: rather, the globalized market system continues to function smoothly, as a “machine for crushing, for grinding, for degrading peoples.” For readers who live in Europe and the United States, fulfilling Césaire’s legacy requires speaking truth to power by insisting on the humanity of nonwhite peoples whose wellbeing is still frequently ignored in the political conversations that most affect them.

Related Themes from Other Texts
Compare and contrast themes from other texts to this theme…

Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe appears in each chapter of Discourse on Colonialism. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
How often theme appears:
chapter length:
Get the entire Discourse on Colonialism LitChart as a printable PDF.
Discourse on Colonialism PDF

Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe Quotes in Discourse on Colonialism

Below you will find the important quotes in Discourse on Colonialism related to the theme of Colonial Racism and the Moral Corruption of Europe.
Section 1 Quotes

A civilization that proves incapable of solving the problems it creates is a decadent civilization.
A civilization that chooses to close its eyes to its most crucial problems is a sick civilization.
A civilization that plays fast and loose with its principles is a dying civilization.
The fact is that the so-called European civilization—“Western” civilization—as it has been shaped by two centuries of bourgeois rule, is incapable of solving the two major problems to which its existence has given rise: the problem of the proletariat and the colonial problem; that Europe is unable to justify itself either before the bar of “reason” or before the bar of “conscience”; and that, increasingly, it takes refuge in a hypocrisy which is all the more odious because it is less and less likely to deceive.
Europe is indefensible.
Apparently that is the conclusion the American strategists are whispering to each other.
That in itself is not serious.
What is serious is that “Europe” is morally, spiritually indefensible.
And today the indictment is brought against it not by the European masses alone, but on a world scale, by tens and tens of millions of men who, from the depths of slavery, set themselves up as judges.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Related Symbols: Civilization and Barbarism
Page Number: 31-2
Explanation and Analysis:

Colonization and civilization?
In dealing with this subject, the commonest curse is to be the dupe in good faith of a collective hypocrisy that cleverly misrepresents problems, the better to legitimize the hateful solutions provided for them.
In other words, the essential thing here is to see clearly, to think clearly—that is, dangerously—and to answer clearly the innocent first question: what, fundamentally, is colonization? To agree on what it is not: neither evangelization nor philanthropic enterprise, nor a desire to push back the frontiers of ignorance, disease, and tyranny, nor a project undertaken for the greater glory of God, nor an attempt to extend the rule of law. To admit once and for all, without flinching at the consequences, that the decisive actors here are the adventurer and the pirate, the wholesale grocer and the ship owner, the gold digger and the merchant, appetite and force, and behind them, the baleful projected shadow of a form of civilization which, at a certain point in its history, finds itself obliged, for internal reasons, to extend to a world scale the competition of its antagonistic economies.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Related Symbols: Civilization and Barbarism
Page Number: 32-3
Explanation and Analysis:
Section 2 Quotes

First we must study how colonization works to decivilize the colonizer, to brutalize him in the true sense of the word, to degrade him, to awaken him to buried instincts, to covetousness, violence, race hatred, and moral relativism; and we must show that each time a head is cut off or an eye put out in Vietnam and in France they accept the fact, each time a little girl is raped and in France they accept the fact, each time a Madagascan is tortured and in France they accept the fact, civilization acquires another dead weight, a universal regression takes place, a gangrene sets in, a center of infection begins to spread; and that at the end of all these treaties that have been violated, all these lies that have been propagated, all these punitive expeditions that have been tolerated, all these prisoners who have been tied up and “interrogated,” all these patriots who have been tortured, at the end of all the racial pride that has been encouraged, all the boastfulness that has been displayed, a poison has been distilled into the veins of Europe and, slowly but surely, the continent proceeds toward savagery.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Related Symbols: Civilization and Barbarism
Page Number: 35-6
Explanation and Analysis:

Yes, it would be worthwhile to study clinically, in detail, the steps taken by Hitler and Hitlerism and to reveal to the very distinguished, very humanistic, very Christian bourgeois of the twentieth century that without his being aware of it, he has a Hitler inside him, that Hitler inhabits him, that Hitler is his demon, that if he rails against him, he is being inconsistent and that, at bottom, what he cannot forgive Hitler for is not the crime in itself, the crime against man, it is not the humiliation of man as such, it is the crime against the white man, the humiliation of the white man, and the fact that he applied to Europe colonialist procedures which until then had been reserved exclusively for the Arabs of Algeria, the “coolies” of India, and the “niggers” of Africa.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker), Adolf Hitler
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

For my part, if I have recalled a few details of these hideous butcheries, it is by no means because I take a morbid delight in them, but because I think that these heads of men, these collections of ears, these burned houses, these Gothic invasions, this steaming blood, these cities that evaporate at the edge of the sword, are not to be so easily disposed of. They prove that colonization, I repeat, dehumanizes even the most civilized man; that colonial activity, colonial enterprise, colonial conquest, which is based on contempt for the native and justified by that contempt, inevitably tends to change him who undertakes it; that the colonizer, who in order to ease his conscience gets into the habit of seeing the other man as an animal, accustoms himself to treating him like an animal, and tends objectively to transform himself into an animal. It is this result, this boomerang effect of colonization that I wanted to point out.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

My turn to state an equation: colonization = “thingification.”

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Section 3 Quotes

One cannot say that the petty bourgeois has never read anything. On the contrary, he has read everything, devoured everything.
Only, his brain functions after the fashion of certain elementary types of digestive systems. It filters. And the filter lets through only what can nourish the thick skin of the bourgeois’s clear conscience.
Before the arrival of the French in their country, the Vietnamese were people of an old culture, exquisite and refined. To recall this fact upsets the digestion of the Banque d’Indochine. Start the forgetting machine!

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker)
Page Number: 52-3
Explanation and Analysis:
Section 4 Quotes

In short, you tip your hat to the Bantu life force, you give a wink to the immortal Bantu soul. And that's all it costs you! You have to admit you're getting off cheap!
As for the government, why should it complain? Since, the Rev. Tempels notes with obvious satisfaction, “from their first contact with the white men, the Bantu considered us from the only point of view that was possible to them, the point of view of their Bantu philosophy” and “integrated us into their hierarchy of life forces at a very high level.”
In other words, arrange it so that the white man, and particularly the Belgian, and even more particularly Albert or Leopold, takes his place at the head of the hierarchy of Bantu life forces, and you have done the trick. You will have brought this miracle to pass: the Bantu god will take responsibility for the Belgian colonialist order, and any Bantu who dares to raise his hand against it will be guilty of sacrilege.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker), Reverend Tempels
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:

And the striking thing they all have in common is the persistent bourgeois attempt to reduce the most human problems to comfortable, hollow notions: the idea of the dependency complex in Mannoni, the ontological idea in the Rev. Tempels, the idea of “tropicality” in Gourou. What has become of the Banque d'Indochine in all that? And the Banque de Madagascar? And the bullwhip? And the taxes? And the handful of rice to the Madagascan or the nhaqué? And the martyrs? And the innocent people murdered? And the bloodstained money piling up in your coffers, gentlemen? They have evaporated! Disappeared, intermingled, become unrecognizable in the realm of pale ratiocinations.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker), Pierre Gourou, Reverend Tempels, Dominique-Octave Mannoni
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:

The supreme goal of the People-State is to preserve the original elements of the race which, by spreading culture, create the beauty and dignity of a superior humanity.

Related Characters: Adolf Hitler (speaker), Aimé Césaire
Related Symbols: Civilization and Barbarism
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:
Section 5 Quotes

And the museums of which M. Caillois is so proud, not for one minute does it cross his mind that, all things considered, it would have been better not to have needed them; that Europe would have done better to tolerate the non-European civilizations at its side, leaving them alive, dynamic and prosperous, whole and not mutilated; that it would have been better to let them develop and fulfill themselves than to present for our admiration, duly labelled, their dead and scattered parts; that anyway, the museum by itself is nothing; that it means nothing, that it can say nothing, when smug self-satisfaction rots the eyes, when a secret contempt for others withers the heart, when racism, admitted or not, dries up sympathy; that it means nothing if its only purpose is to feed the delights of vanity; that after all, the honest contemporary of Saint Louis, who fought Islam but respected it, had a better chance of knowing it than do our contemporaries (even if they have a smattering of ethnographic literature), who despise it.
No, in the scales of knowledge all the museums in the world will never weigh so much as one spark of human sympathy.

Related Characters: Aimé Césaire (speaker), Roger Caillois
Related Symbols: The Museum
Page Number: 71-2
Explanation and Analysis: