Mohammad Jashim Uddin, Associate Professor, Department of English, Northern University Bangladesh, Bangladesh, Email: [email protected]
Abstract
The July Revolution of 2024 was a pivotal, student-led uprising against authoritarian governance in Bangladesh. This paper argues that, beyond its political outcomes, the revolution was a profound psychological event for its youth participants. Applying a Fanonian theoretical lens, this study conducts an in-depth psycho-political analysis of the student activists, exploring the transformation of their consciousness and the reformation of their individual and collective identities within the crucible of revolutionary struggle. Employing a qualitative methodology centered on critical discourse analysis, the research examines how activists navigated oppression, deconstructed pre-existing identities of fear and apathy, and forged new, liberated subjectivities. The findings suggest that the revolution functioned as a psychological catharsis, spurring a "decolonization of the mind." This created a new collective identity grounded in political efficacy and democratic aspirations. The paper concludes that this "Fanonian imperative"—the intrinsic drive to construct an empowered political consciousness—is essential for understanding the movement's legacy and its profound implications for Bangladesh's democratic future.
Keywords: July Revolution of 2024 in Bangladesh, Student Activism, Fanonian Theory, Political Psychology, Identity Formation.
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