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Contents vii Acknowledgments 3 Introduction —Raphael Dalleo I. HAITI AND HEMISPHERIC INDEPENDENCE 25 1. Bolívar in Haiti: Republicanism in the Revolutionary Atlantic —Sibylle Fischer 54 2. Between Anti-Haitianism and Anti-imperialism: Haitian and Cuban Political Collaborations in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries —Matthew Casey II. HAITI AND TRANSNATIONAL BLACKNESS 77 3. Haiti, Pan-Africanism, and Black Atlantic Resistance Writing —Jeff Karem 96 4. “Being a Member of the Colored Race”: The Mission of Charles Young, Military Attaché to Haiti, 1904–1907 —David P. Kilroy III. THE U.S. OCCUPATION 111 5. Haiti’s Revisionary Haunting of Charles Chesnutt’s “Careful” History in Paul Marchand, F.M.C —Bethany Aery Clerico 133 6. The Black Magic Island: The Artistic Journeys of Alexander King and Aaron Douglas from and to Haiti —Lindsay Twa Contents vi 161 7. Foreign Impulses in Annie Desroy’s Le Joug —Nadève Ménard IV. GLOBALIZATION AND CRISIS 179 8. The Rhetoric of Crisis and Foreclosing the Future of Haiti in Ghosts of Cité Soleil —Christopher Garland 199 9. A Marshall Plan for a Haiti at Peace: To Continue or End the Legacy of the Revolution —Myriam J. A. Chancy 219 Afterword: Neither France nor Senegal: Bovarysme and Haiti’s Hemispheric Identity —J. Michael Dash 231 Contributors 235 Index ...

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