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Vient de paraître Tropics of Haiti. Race and the Literary History of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World, 1789-1865 de Marlene L. Daut aux Liverpool UP

Le 22 mai 2016 à 19h14

Vient de paraître Tropics of Haiti. Race and the Literary History of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World, 1789-1865 de Marlene L. Daut aux Liverpool University Press, "Liverpool Studies in International Slavery" (vol. 8), 2015, 692 p. ISBN : 9781781381854 Prix 25 £ (existe aussi en version électronique).

"The Haitian Revolution (1791–1804) was an event of monumental world-historical significance, and here, in the first systematic literary history of those events, Haiti’s war of independence is examined through the eyes of its actual and imagined participants, observers, survivors, and cultural descendants. The ’transatlantic print culture’ under discussion in this literary history reveals that enlightenment racial ’science’ was the primary vehicle through which the Haitian Revolution was interpreted by nineteenth-century Haitians, Europeans, and U.S. Americans alike. Through its author’s contention that the Haitian revolutionary wars were incessantly racialized by four constantly recurring tropes—the ’monstrous hybrid’, the ’tropical temptress’, the ’tragic mulatto/a’, and the ’colored historian’—Tropics of Haiti shows the ways in which the nineteenth-century tendency to understand Haiti’s revolution in primarily racial terms has affected present day demonizations of Haiti and Haitians. In the end, this new archive of Haitian revolutionary writing, much of which has until now remained unknown to the contemporary reading public, invites us to examine how nineteenth-century attempts to paint Haitian independence as the result of a racial revolution coincide with present-day desires to render insignificant and ’unthinkable’ the second independent republic of the New World."



Marlene L. Daut is Assistant Professor of English and Cultural Studies, Claremont Graduate University and Assistant Professor of Africana Studies, Intercollegiate Department of Africana Studies, The Claremont Colleges.