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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Introduction. Haiti and the Early United States, Entwined Elizabeth
Part I. Histories
Chapter 1. Revolutionary St. Domingue and the Emerging Atlantic: Paradigms of Sovereignty
Chapter 2. (Mis)reading the Revolution: Philadelphia and “St. Domingo,” 1789–1792
Chapter 3. “The Mischief That Awaits Us”: Revolution, Rumor, and Serial Unrest in the Early Republic
Chapter 4. “Entirely Different from Any Likeness I Ever Saw”: Aesthetics as Counter-Memory Historiography and the Iconography of Toussaint Louverture
Chapter 5. Frederick Douglass, Anténor Firmin, and the Making of U.S.-Haitian Relations
Part II. Geographies
Chapter 6. The Louisiana Purchase and the Haitian Revolution
Chapter 7. Republic of Medicine: Immunology and National Identity in the Age of Revolution
Chapter 8. The Occult Atlantic: Franklin, Mesmer, and the Haitian Roots of Modernity
Chapter 9. In the Shadow of Haiti: The Negro Seamen Act, Counter-Revolutionary St. Domingue, and Black Emigration
Chapter 10. The Haytian Papers and Black Labor Ideology in the Antebellum United States
Part III. Textualities
Chapter 11. The Constitution of Toussaint: Another Origin of African American Literature
Chapter 12. Haiti and the New-World Novel
Chapter 13. Dispossession and Cosmopolitan Community in Leonora Sansay’s Secret History
Chapter 14. Theatrical Rebels and Refugees: The Triumphs of Love, the Haitian Revolution, and Early American Performance Cultures
Chapter 15. The “Alpha and Omega” of Haitian Literature: Baron de Vastey and the U.S. Audience of Haitian Political Writing, 1807–1825
Epilogue. Two Archives and the Idea of Haiti
Notes
Works Cited
Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
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