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Black Republic

African Americans and the Fate of Haiti

"In this far-ranging and deeply researched book, Brandon R. Byrd examines post–Civil War African American engagement with Haiti. Byrd boldly extends the record on African American views of Haiti right up to the US occupation of Haiti in the early twentieth century...Byrd’s work is an important corrective and deserves praise for bringing together in one study the broad question of Haiti’s presence in African American consciousness. His book will be an immensely valuable reference tool for scholars into the future and is amajor contribution to the growing scholarship on African Americans enduring preoccupation and identification with Haiti."

The Journal of African American History
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Detaljer

Forlag
University of Pennsylvania Press
Innbinding
Paperback
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
312
ISBN
9780812225198
Utgivelsesår
2022
Format
23 x 15 cm
Priser
Finalist for the Pauli Murray Book Prize in Black Intellectual History, granted by the African American Intellectual History Society null

Anmeldelser

"In this far-ranging and deeply researched book, Brandon R. Byrd examines post–Civil War African American engagement with Haiti. Byrd boldly extends the record on African American views of Haiti right up to the US occupation of Haiti in the early twentieth century...Byrd’s work is an important corrective and deserves praise for bringing together in one study the broad question of Haiti’s presence in African American consciousness. His book will be an immensely valuable reference tool for scholars into the future and is amajor contribution to the growing scholarship on African Americans enduring preoccupation and identification with Haiti."

The Journal of African American History

"Byrd reinterprets intellectual history by placing Haiti at the centre of the Black Atlantic’s freedom dreams. Though scholars suggest that Haiti was fertile ground for Black thinkers to nurture ideas about self-determination, Byrd guides us through their imagined garden, exposing its lushness during the oft-overlooked post-emancipation period. This gorgeously written and rigorously researched text makes an indispensable contribution to Black history and will transform how intellectual historians engage with the Black Atlantic."

American Nineteenth Century History

"[D]eep and elegant . . . Byrd fills a signiflcant gap in scholarship by focusing on the relationship of Haiti and the U.S. during emancipation, Reconstruction, and the establishment of Jim Crow . . . Byrd's argument is striking and sound. His book reminds readers that American identity has always been bound up, for better or worse, with the fate of its neighbors."

<i>Anglican and Episcopal History</i>

"In this extraordinary book, Brandon R. Byrd both rewrites the history of Black internationalism, locating Haiti firmly at its center, and offers a refreshingly nuanced reconsideration of the many ways that US African Americans engaged with the 'Black Republic' after the American Civil War."

Marlene L. Daut, author of <i>Baron de Vastey and the Origins of Black Atlantic Humanism</i>

"Brandon Byrd's examination of African Americans' concern with Haiti during the years from the US Civil War to the start of the occupation fills an important gap in scholarship. Using materials ranging from diplomatic archives to plays and public celebrations, Byrd shows the many ways in which black Americans imagined the Caribbean republic as their own status changed, from the hopes of the Reconstruction period to the increasingly difficult conditions of the Jim Crow era. He also convincingly demonstrates that any history of US foreign relations during this period needs to take the opinions and actions of African Americans into account."

<i>H-DIPLO</i>

"Brandon R. Byrd tracks the history of an idea, possibly even an aspiration, of how Haiti haunted African American political thought in myriad ways, while also demonstrating the vexed relationship various U.S. black thinkers had with the first black independent republic. The Black Republic will prove an invaluable work of scholarship that will transform how historians and scholars more generally approach black political thought and black intellectual life."

Minkah Makalani, author of <i>In the Cause of Freedom: Radical Black Internationalism from Harlem to

"An innovative intellectual history of black possibility, The Black Republic wonderfully recovers a forgotten period in American history when the future of the world was unknown and Haiti loomed over the political visions of white supremacists and black revolutionaries alike. Brandon R. Byrd demonstrates how merely the idea of Haiti has long been central to the Western political imagination-as a litmus test for black self-determination, a warning about the dangers of Negro rule, or as a crossroads for America's imperial ambitions."

Davarian L. Baldwin, author of <i>Chicago's New Negroes: Modernity, the Great Migration, and Black U

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