The Haitian Revolution was a powerful blow against colonialism and slavery and as its thinkers and fighters blazed the path to universal freedom they forced anticolonial antislavery and antiracist ideals into modern political grammar. The first state in the Americas to permanently abolish slavery outlaw color prejudice and forbid colonialism Haitians established their nation in a hostile Atlantic World. Slavery was ubiquitous throughout the rest of the Americas and foreign nations and empires repeatedly attacked Haitian sovereignty. Yet Haitian writers and politicians successfully defended their independence while planting the ideological roots of egalitarian statehood. Daut situates famous and lesser-known eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Haitian revolutionaries pamphleteers and political thinkers within the global history of ideas showing how their systems of knowledge and interpretation took center stage in the Age of Revolutions. While modern understandings of freedom and equality are often linked to the French Declaration of the Rights of Man or the US Declaration of Independence Daut argues that the more immediate reference should be to what she calls the 1804 Principle that no human being should ever again be colonized or enslaved an idea promulgated by the Haitians who against all odds upended French empire.
Awakening the Ashes: An Intellectual History of the Haitian Revolution Book
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