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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Prof Kir Kuiken (SUNY Albany, USA) , Prof Deborah Elise White (Emory University, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic USA Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9781501366352ISBN 10: 1501366351 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 02 December 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents"Acknowledgments Introduction Kir Kuiken (SUNY Albany, USA) and Deborah Elise White (Emory University, USA) 1. The Shadow of Voltaire: Early Haitian Literature and the Claims of Intertextuality Chris Bongie (Queen’s University at Kingston Ontario, Canada) 2. Romantic Fevers: Calenture and Calenda in the Americas Mary Grace Albanese (SUNY Binghamton, USA) 3. Toussaint Louverture: Creating a Public Romantic Subject Theresa M. Kelley (University of Wisconsin at Madison, USA) 4. Seeing into the Very Bones: C. L. R. James and William Wordsworth on Figure, Personhood, and Revolutionary Discourse Brian McGrath (Clemson University, USA) 5. Unavowed Community in Kleist’s Betrothal in San Domingo Kir Kuiken (SUNY Albany, USA) 6. ""Despair Begins with Stupefaction"": Unthinkable Agencies in Hugo’s Bug-Jargal Deborah Elise White (Emory University, USA) 7. Revolutionary Resonances in Frances Watkins Harper’s ""Triumph of Freedom"" Brigitte Fielder (University of Wisconsin at Madison, USA) 8. Revolutionary Shattering: Emerson on the Haitian Revolution Branka Arsic (Columbia University, USA) Notes on Contributors Index"ReviewsThis pioneering volume traces compellingly how the Haitian Revolution left a profound mark on transatlantic Romanticism, which transcended genres, disciplines, languages, and races. It forms a ground-breaking contribution both to Romantic and Haitian Revolutionary Studies. * Raphael Hoermann, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Black Atlantic Research, University of Central Lancashire, UK * It is hard to imagine an historical event that more complexly or forcefully announces that Black lives matter than the Haitian Revolution, born amid the depravities of the most profitable plantation economy in the Caribbean. The events of 1791-1804 augured an unprecedented intervention in the modern world: a society for which an unqualified and universal right to freedom was not a theoretical abstraction but a political and moral practice. This volume, brimming with elegantly written and deeply researched scholarship, traces the layered transnational literary afterlives of the slave insurrection in Saint-Domingue, an insurrection that did much more than smash the slave system. As the scholars gathered here amply demonstrate, the revolution in Haiti has never ceased calling for the transformation of the very idea of revolution, as it does Romantic and Enlightenment conceptions of personhood, liberality, freedom, and literature. Haiti's Literary Legacies responds to that summons with uncommon rigor and imagination, reading the still unfolding aftermaths of Romanticism and Haiti through each other. This compelling volume leaves us with a wonderfully generative problem: what the 21st century makes of the Haitian Revolution will depend largely on what the Haitian Revolution makes of us. * David L. Clark, Professor of English and Cultural Studies, McMaster University, Canada * At a time when the Haitian Revolution is being taught in history and literature classrooms more than ever before, this volume on the relationship of these world-historical events to literary romanticism could not be more timely. The volume's transnational scope and focus on writerly engagements with Haiti throughout the 19th century provides much-needed breadth and will ensure its enduring appeal. * Marlene L. Daut, Professor of African Diaspora Studies, University of Virginia, USA * This pioneering volume traces compellingly how the Haitian Revolution left a profound mark on transatlantic Romanticism, which transcended genres, disciplines, languages, and races. It forms a ground-breaking contribution both to Romantic and Haitian Revolutionary Studies. * Raphael Hoermann, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Black Atlantic Research, University of Central Lancashire, UK * It is hard to imagine an historical event that more complexly or forcefully announces that Black lives matter than the Haitian Revolution, born amid the depravities of the most profitable plantation economy in the Caribbean. The events of 1791-1804 augured an unprecedented intervention in the modern world: a society for which an unqualified and universal right to freedom was not a theoretical abstraction but a political and moral practice. This volume, brimming with elegantly written and deeply researched scholarship, traces the layered transnational literary afterlives of the slave insurrection in Saint-Domingue, an insurrection that did much more than smash the slave system. As the scholars gathered here amply demonstrate, the revolution in Haiti has never ceased calling for the transformation of the very idea of revolution, as it does Romantic and Enlightenment conceptions of personhood, liberality, freedom, and literature. Haiti's Literary Legacies responds to that summons with uncommon rigor and imagination, reading the still unfolding aftermaths of Romanticism and Haiti through each other. This compelling volume leaves us with a wonderfully generative problem: what the 21st century makes of the Haitian Revolution will depend largely on what the Haitian Revolution makes of us. * David L. Clark, Professor of English and Cultural Studies, McMaster University, Canada * Author InformationKir Kuiken is Associate Professor of English at the University at Albany, SUNY, USA, and the author of Imagined Sovereignties: Towards a New Political Romanticism (2014) as well as essays on Kleist, Wordsworth, Derrida, Rancière and others. Deborah Elise White is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Emory University, USA, and the author of Romantic Returns: Superstition, Imagination, History (2000) as well as essays on Coleridge, Derrida, Freud, Hugo, and Marx. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |