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University of California Press

About the Book

In Haiti, History, and the Gods, Joan Dayan charts the cultural imagination of Haiti not only by reconstructing the island's history but by highlighting ambiguities and complexities that have been ignored. She investigates the confrontational space in which Haiti is created and recreated in fiction and fact, text and ritual, discourse and practice. Dayan's ambitious project is a research tour de force that gives human dimensions to this eighteenth-century French colony and provides a template for understanding the Haiti of today.

In examining the complex social fabric of French Saint-Domingue, which in 1804 became Haiti, Dayan uncovers a silenced, submerged past. Instead of relying on familiar sources to reconstruct Haitian history, she uses a startling diversity of voices that have previously been unheard. Many of the materials recovered here—overlooked or repressed historical texts, legal documents, religious works, secret memoirs, letters, and literary fictions—have never been translated into English. Others, such as Marie Vieux Chauvet's radical novel of vodou, Fonds des Nègres, are seldom used as historical sources.

Dayan also argues provocatively for the consideration of both vodou rituals and narrative fiction as repositories of history. Her scholarship is enriched by the insights she has gleaned from conversations and experiences during her many trips to Haiti over the past twenty years. Taken together, the material presented in Haiti, History, and the Gods not only restores a lost chapter of Haitian history but suggests necessary revisions to the accepted histories of the New World.

About the Author

Joan Dayan, Professor of English at the University of Arizona, is the author of Fables of Mind: An Inquiry into Poe's Fiction (1987) and A Rainbow for the Christian West (1977).

Table of Contents

PROLOGUE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTE ON ORTHOGRAPHY

PART ONE
1
Rituals of History

Romancing the Dark World
Black Skin, White Heart
Between Civilization and Barbarism
No Easy Liberty
Dessalines, Dessalines Demanbre
Dismemberment, Naming, and Divinity
Defilee
Ezili
Service

PART TWO
2
Fictions of Haiti

Writing Misery
A Rhetoric of Lament
Holy Earth, We Are among Your Children
Dying to Serve
Ezili, Marinet, Agwe, and Ogou
Marie-Ange, Claire, and Rose
"Hallelujah for a Garden-Woman"

PART THREE
3
Last Days of Saint-Domingue

The Paradise of the New World
Locked Up in Saint-Domingue
An American Adventure
Leonora Sansay, Aaron Burr, and the Love Letter
Dressed to Kill
A New World Theater

4
Gothic Americas

Romance and Race
The Black Code
Sade, Lejeune, and the Manual
Taxonomies of Enlightenment
Tools of Terror
The Long Road to Guinea

CHRONOLOGY
NOTES
INDEX

Reviews

"By viewing Revolutionary-era Haiti through the lenses of gender and sexuality, Joan Dayan breathes life into an important slice of history."—Karen McCarthy Brown, author of Mama Lola