Marlene L. Daut is Professor of African Diaspora
Studies at the University of Virginia and author of Tropics of
Haiti: Race and the Literary History of the Haitian Revolution in
the Atlantic World, 1789-1865.
Grégory Pierrot is Associate Professor of English
at the University of Connecticut, Stamford, and author of The Black
Avenger in Atlantic Culture.
Marion C. Rohrleitner is Associate Professor of
English at the University of Texas, El Paso, and coeditor of
Dialogues across Diasporas: Women Writers, Scholars, and Activists
of Africana and Latina Descent in Conversation.
A brilliant collection--readable, comprehensive, scholarly--and
just the thing for a time in which teaching by regional/linguistic
canon boundaries is increasingly out of step with scholarly
knowledge and ethical frameworks to dehegemonize and desegregate
humanistic traditions. " - Deborah Jenson, Duke University,
coeditor of Poetry of Haitian Independence
"Bound to become one of the most important works in the fields of
Haitian studies, transatlantic studies, and Caribbean history.
While there are a number of books, including new edited versions of
novels, that focus on the Haitian Revolution, there is no other
anthology that brings together such a large number of varied texts
and provides such detailed and comprehensive analysis of this
period. " - Cécile Accilien, University of Kennesaw, author of
Rethinking Marriage in Francophone African and Caribbean
Literatures
"Haitian Revolutionary Fictions is a generous offering to its
readers, an invitation to see more clearly the stakes of
representing Black demands for freedom in a world that sought – and
fought mightily – to deny such radical vision. The literary, in
this volume, is shown to offer a unique prism through which to peer
into the past, to allow for visceral encounters with the stories
and ideologies that surrounded Haitian independence across time and
space, language and genre. With elegance and true insight the
editors of this exceptional anthology have crafted what is sure to
be a reference in the field of Haitian Studies, of great use to
researchers and students alike. The volume's careful presentation
of its vast corpus is indeed a testament to Daut, Pierrot, and
Rohrleitner's passion and erudition, to their certain faith in the
worlds of scholarship their work encourages us to imagine. " -
Kaiama L. Glover, Barnard College, author of A Regarded Self:
Caribbean Womanhood and the Ethics of Disorderly Being
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |