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When Philippe-Richard Marius arrived in Port-au-Prince to begin fieldwork for this monograph, to him and to legions of people worldwide, Haiti was axiomatically the first Black Republic. Descendants of Africans did in fact create the Haitian nation-state on January 1, 1804, as the outcome of a slave uprising that defeated white supremacy in the French colony of Saint-Domingue. Haiti’s Founding Founders, as colonial natives, were nonetheless to varying degrees Latinized subjects of the Atlantic. They envisioned freedom differently than the African-born former slaves, who sought to replicate African nonstate societies. Haiti’s Founders indeed first defeated native Africans’ armies before they defeated the French. Not surprisingly, problematic vestiges of colonialism carried over to the independent nation.

Marius recasts the world-historical significance of the Saint-Domingue Revolution to investigate the twinned significance of color/race and class in the reproduction of privilege and inequality in contemporary Haiti. Through his ethnography, class emerges as the principal site of social organization among Haitians, notwithstanding the country’s global prominence as a “Black Republic.” It is class, and not color or race, that primarily produces distinctive Haitian socioeconomic formations.

Marius interrogates Haitian Black nationalism without diminishing the colossal achievement of the enslaved people of Saint-Domingue in destroying slavery in the colony, then the Napoleonic army sent to restore it. Providing clarity on the uses of race, color, and nation in sociopolitical and economic organization in Haiti and other postcolonial bourgeois societies, Marius produces a provocative characterization of the Haitian nation-state that rejects the Black Republic paradigm.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
  2. pp. i-viii
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. ix-x
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. xi-xii
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  1. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
  2. pp. xiii-xiv
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  1. Preface: Positionality, Method, and the Haitian Vocabulary of Color
  2. pp. xv-xxiv
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  1. The Unexceptional Case of Haiti
  1. Introduction: Privilege in Haiti and the Caribbean's Modernity
  2. pp. 3-24
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  1. Historical Context: Class, Race, and Nation
  2. pp. 25-46
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  1. Snapshot of a Western Place: Modern and Racialized, Unequal and Moral
  2. pp. 47-69
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  1. Noirisme and the Political Instrumentality of Blackness
  2. pp. 70-93
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  1. Class and Black-Nationalist Sociality
  2. pp. 94-110
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  1. Mulatto, Prejudice, and Other White Tidemarks of the Nation
  2. pp. 111-132
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  1. Unity in Colorism and Class Ideologies
  2. pp. 133-151
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  1. Material Unity in Privilege
  2. pp. 152-173
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  1. The Political Economy of Knowing White
  2. pp. 174-192
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  1. Liberal Politics in a Failure of Hermeneutics--Yon Travay Jigantès
  2. pp. 193-204
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 205-214
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  1. References
  2. pp. 215-222
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  1. About the Author
  2. pp. 223-224
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