
Contents
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A Note on Geography A Note on Geography
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An “Archive of Liberty” An “Archive of Liberty”
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Background and Foreground Background and Foreground
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Summary of Chapters Summary of Chapters
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Cite
Abstract
The introduction to this study articulates the central theme of the book, which is to present the Haitian Revolution (1789-1809) from the perspective of the entire island of Hispaniola, rather than solely or primarily that of French Saint-Domingue and the French empire. This chapter situates the Haitian Revolution within the “long” eighteenth century of a Hispaniola divided into two colonies, one French and the other Spanish, entwined in an often uneasy interdependence. Such an analysis in turn entails a transnational and trans-imperial framework involving the French, Spanish, and even British empires. This chapter offers an overview of the island’s pre-revolutionary history and introduces key topics covered in the work, such as slaves’ and freed persons’ uses of the law; the construction of a colonial archive of race, slavery, and emancipation; and the comparatively little-studied project of reenslavement undertaken by the Napoleonic general Jean-Louis Ferrand in French-occupied Santo Domingo from 1804 to 1809.
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