Contents
Foreword
Preface
Part I : Saint-Domingue on the Eve of Revolution: Politics and
Economics
1. The Colony of Saint-Domingue on the Eve of Revolution David
Geggus
2. Vestiges of the Built Landscape of Pre-revolutionary
Saint-Domingue Jacques de Cauna
3. Saint-Domingue's Free People of Color and the Tools of
Revolution John Garrigus
4. On the Road to Citizenship: The Complex Paths toward the
Integration of Free People of Color in the Two Capitals of
Saint-Domingue Dominique Rogers
5. Colonial Absolutism: Politics in Principle and Practice in the
Old Regime Gene Ogle
Part II: Unfolding of the Slave Revolution
6. The Insurgents of 1791, their Leaders, and the Concept of
Independence Yves Benot
7. Avenging America: The Politics of Violence in the Haitian
Revolution Laurent Dubois
8. Fêtes de l'hymen, fêtes de la liberté: Matrimony, Emancipation,
and the Creation of New Men Elizabeth Colwill
9. The Colonial Vendée Malick Ghachem
10. The Slave Revolution and the Unfolding of Independence in
Saint-Domingue, 1801-1804
Part III: Reverberations Carolyn Fick
11. The French Revolution's Other Island: The Impact of
Saint-Domingue on Revolutionary Politics in France Jeremy
Popkin
12. Repercussions of the Haitian Revolution in Cuba, 1791-1812 Ada
Ferrer
13. Exiles in the United States Ashli White
14. Free Upon Higher Ground: Saint-Domingue Slaves' Suits for
Freedom in U. S. Courts, 1792-1830 Sue Peabody
15. Repercussions of the Haitian Revolution in Brazil João José
Reis and Flavio Gomes
Part IV: Representations of the Revolution
16. The Specter of Saint-Domingue: The Impact of the Haitian
Revolution in the United States and France Alyssa Goldstein
Sepinwall
17. Representations of the Haitian Revolution in French Fiction
Léon-François Hoffmann
18. Neo-Classicism and the Haitian Revolution Carlo Célius
Afterword
Index
Scholarship on one of the most consequential events in the history of Atlantic slavery
David Patrick Geggus teaches history at the University of Florida, Gainesville. Among his books are Slavery, War and Revolution and Haitian Revolutionary Studies (IUP, 2003).
Norman Fiering is author of Moral Philosophy at Seventeenth-Century Harvard: A Discipline in Transition and Jonathan Edwards's Moral Thought and Its British Context. Fiering is past director and librarian of the John Carter Brown Library.
"Each chapter promises a major attempt at careful inquiry into complex issues, and each contributor is a recognized scholar of the Haitian Revolution and connected fields of scholarly inquiry. The volume brings a wide range of angles of vision and approaches to the revolution and its place in world history." David Barry Gaspar, Duke University
Ask a Question About this Product More... |