Albert MemmiThe Colonizer and the Colonized (French: Portrait du colonisé, précédé par Portrait du colonisateur) is a nonfiction book by Albert Memmi, published in French in 1957 and first published in an English translation in 1965. The work explores and describes the psychological effects of colonialism on colonized and colonizers alike.
Colonizers, according Memmi, idolize their own cultures and degrade colonized cultures, as colonization itself valorizes racism as both a foundational premise and the ultimate expression of its power.
Memmi argues that the colonized have a complex and contradictory relation with the colonizers, hating them while simultaneously admiring them. Effective decolonization requires the colonized to complete three steps: first, accept separateness and see themselves as individuals as well as a collective people; second, to engage in excessive self-affirmation to encourage their developing political subjectivity; and third, to establish a truthful perception of one's self (and, one's people).