Doris Y. Kadish is Distinguished Research Professor Emerita of French and Women’s Studies at the University of Georgia. Deborah Jenson is Professor of Romance Studies and Global Health at Duke University. Norman R. Shapiro is Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures and Distinguished Professor of Literary Translation at Wesleyan University and an Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.
“Doris Kadish is already known for her valuable and subtle
contributions to the study of women and slavery. Together with
Deborah Jenson's talent and Norman Shapiro's elegant translations,
we are treated to a polyphonic book which revives the lost voices
of long forgotten poets. The importance and complexity of the
Haitian revolution comes to life in page after page.”—Maryse Condé,
author of I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem
*Maryse Condé*
“Poetry of Haitian Independence is a magnificent accomplishment,
overcoming the stigma of ‘collective bovarism’ with erudition and
grace to bring readers a wealth of largely unknown, often stirring
poetry that sheds light on the cultural, historical, and political
development of Haiti following its 1804 independence.”—Nick
Nesbitt, Princeton University
*Nick Nesbitt*
“This groundbreaking collection shines a much-needed light on the
diverse styles, themes, and politics of post-Revolutionary Haitian
poetry, as well as on the importance of such verse in public life.
It will be enormously valuable for scholars and students of Haitian
literature and history, as well as for anyone interested in
nineteenth-century transatlantic literary cultures.”—Kate Ramsey,
author of The Spirits and the Law: Vodou and Power in Haiti
*Kate Ramsey*
“This collection presents for the first time an alternative history
of Haiti right after the only successful revolution of slaves
in the New World. There is simply nothing like it.”—Colin Dayan,
author of Haiti, History, and the Gods
*Colin Dayan*
“The translation is a tour de force. This is an essential missing
link to work on the African diaspora, on Haiti, and most
importantly not only on comparative slaveries, but on comparative
revolutions.”—Alessandra Benedicty, City College of New York
*Alessandra Benedicty*
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