<i>“Modernity Disavowed </i>is a superior work. It is not only important but also needed.”-Alicia RÍos, coeditor of <i>The Latin American Cultural Studies Reader</i> <i>“Modernity Disavowed</i> is a tour de force. This magnificent work is the best book on its subject and at the forefront of a new wave of scholarship that is already transforming both the study of the Caribbean and the study of modernity. I fully expect it to become a classic in its field.”-Lewis R. Gordon, author of <i>Existentia Africana: Understanding Africana Existential Thought</i>
Fischer draws on history, literary scholarship, political theory, philosophy, and psychoanalytic theory to examine a range of material, including Haitian political and legal documents and nineteenth-century Cuban and Dominican literature and art. She demonstrates that at a time when racial taxonomies were beginning to mutate into scientific racism and racist biology, the Haitian revolutionaries recognized the question of race as political. Yet, as the cultural records of neighboring Cuba and the Dominican Republic show, the story of the Haitian Revolution has been told as one outside politics and beyond human language, as a tale of barbarism and unspeakable violence. From the time of the revolution onward, the story has been confined to the margins of history: to rumors, oral histories, and confidential letters. Fischer maintains that without accounting for revolutionary antislavery and its subsequent disavowal, Western modernity-including its hierarchy of values, depoliticization of social goals having to do with racial differences, and privileging of claims of national sovereignty-cannot be fully understood.
Introduction: Tuncations of Modernity 1
Part I. Cuba
1. The Deadly Hermenuetics of the Trial of Jose Antonio Aponte 41
2. Civilization and Barbarism: Cuban Wall Painting 57
3. Beyon National Culture, the Abject: The Case of Placido 77
4. Cuban Antislavery Narratives and the Origins of Literary Discourse 107
Part II. Santo Domingo / The Dominican Republic
5. Memory, Trauma, History 131
6. Guilt and Betrayal in Santo Domingo 155
7. What Do the Haitians Want? 169
8. Fictions of Literary History 180
Part III. Saint Domingue / Haiti
9. Literature and the Theater of Revolution 201
10. “General Liberty, or The Planters in Paris” 214
11. Foundational Fictions: Postrevolutionary Constitutions I 227
12. Life in the Kingdom of the North 245
13. Liberty and Reason of State: Postrevolutionary Constitutions II 260
Conclusion 273
Appendix A. Imperial Constitution of Haiti 275
Appendix B. Chronology 283
Notes 287
Index 355
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Sibylle Fischer is Associate Professor of Literature and Romance Studies at Duke University.