Arthur F. Saint-Aubin
The Memoirs of Toussaint and Isaac Louverture
Representing the Black Masculine Subject in Narratives of Mourning and Loss
Arthur F. Saint-Aubin
The Memoirs of Toussaint and Isaac Louverture
Representing the Black Masculine Subject in Narratives of Mourning and Loss
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This book examines the memoir of Toussaint Louverture-a former slave, general in the French army, and leader of the Haitian Revolution-and the memoir of his son, Isaac.
This book examines the memoir of Toussaint Louverture-a former slave, general in the French army, and leader of the Haitian Revolution-and the memoir of his son, Isaac.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- New Directions in Africana Studies
- Verlag: Lehigh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 598g
- ISBN-13: 9781611461954
- ISBN-10: 1611461952
- Artikelnr.: 42582210
- New Directions in Africana Studies
- Verlag: Lehigh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 598g
- ISBN-13: 9781611461954
- ISBN-10: 1611461952
- Artikelnr.: 42582210
By Arthur F. Saint-Aubin
Dedication Acknowledgments Preface Father of a Nation/Father of Sons A
Father's Son/A Son of the Nation Authors of Memoirs Manuscripts: The
Production of Meaning and the Performance of Masculinity Chronology Chapter
One: First Publications Toussaint Louverture's Memoir: A Profile in
Racialized Anxiety Prefacing and Appending Toussaint's Memoir: Exposing the
Black Male Body and Diverting Blackness Isaac Louverture's Memoir: A
Representation of Black Masculinity in the Name of the Father Reading and
Writing the Father Re-Reading and Re-Writing the Father Validating Black
Masculinity in the Notes Chapter Two: The Louvertures and the Evolution of
Memoir Writing in France: Personalizing the Historical/Historicizing the
Personal Personalizing the Historical: Revealing Truth in the First Person
Historicizing the Personal: Demonstrating Truth in the Third Person A
Louverturian "Family Romance" Chapter Three: Remembered Injustices: A
Memory of History/The Fiction of Memory Father and Son: Between History and
Memory The Coloring of Memory: The Psychical and Social Construction of
Remembering Toussaint Mis-Remembers: Is There a Constitution in this Text?
Isaac Remembers Napoleon but Mis-Remembers His Brother From Counter-History
to Fictionalization All of Saint-Domingue is a Stage: Toussaint Louverture,
Dramaturge From the Dramatic to the Lyrical: Isaac Louverture, Poet Chapter
Four: Toussaint's Constitution: Power, Memoir Writing, and the Making of
Black Manhood From Constitution to Memoir: A Diagram of Masculine Justice
Power, Race, and Masculine Self-Actualization in the Memoirs of Toussaint
and Isaac Louverture Chapter Five: The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: Toward Narratives of Mourning and Melancholia Psychoanalysis:
Race, Nation, and Masculine Identity The Louvertures : Resisting
Whiteness/Desiring Whiteness The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: The Body of the Father Like Father, Like Son: Desiring
Whiteness/Resisting Whiteness Mourning Becomes the Black Male Subject
Toussaint's Disconsolation/Isaac's Loss Postscript: The Louvertures, Haiti,
and a Diasporic Tradition of Writing the Masculine Self Appendix: "Le jour
de la paix" (Isaac Louverture) Works Cited About the Author
Father's Son/A Son of the Nation Authors of Memoirs Manuscripts: The
Production of Meaning and the Performance of Masculinity Chronology Chapter
One: First Publications Toussaint Louverture's Memoir: A Profile in
Racialized Anxiety Prefacing and Appending Toussaint's Memoir: Exposing the
Black Male Body and Diverting Blackness Isaac Louverture's Memoir: A
Representation of Black Masculinity in the Name of the Father Reading and
Writing the Father Re-Reading and Re-Writing the Father Validating Black
Masculinity in the Notes Chapter Two: The Louvertures and the Evolution of
Memoir Writing in France: Personalizing the Historical/Historicizing the
Personal Personalizing the Historical: Revealing Truth in the First Person
Historicizing the Personal: Demonstrating Truth in the Third Person A
Louverturian "Family Romance" Chapter Three: Remembered Injustices: A
Memory of History/The Fiction of Memory Father and Son: Between History and
Memory The Coloring of Memory: The Psychical and Social Construction of
Remembering Toussaint Mis-Remembers: Is There a Constitution in this Text?
Isaac Remembers Napoleon but Mis-Remembers His Brother From Counter-History
to Fictionalization All of Saint-Domingue is a Stage: Toussaint Louverture,
Dramaturge From the Dramatic to the Lyrical: Isaac Louverture, Poet Chapter
Four: Toussaint's Constitution: Power, Memoir Writing, and the Making of
Black Manhood From Constitution to Memoir: A Diagram of Masculine Justice
Power, Race, and Masculine Self-Actualization in the Memoirs of Toussaint
and Isaac Louverture Chapter Five: The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: Toward Narratives of Mourning and Melancholia Psychoanalysis:
Race, Nation, and Masculine Identity The Louvertures : Resisting
Whiteness/Desiring Whiteness The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: The Body of the Father Like Father, Like Son: Desiring
Whiteness/Resisting Whiteness Mourning Becomes the Black Male Subject
Toussaint's Disconsolation/Isaac's Loss Postscript: The Louvertures, Haiti,
and a Diasporic Tradition of Writing the Masculine Self Appendix: "Le jour
de la paix" (Isaac Louverture) Works Cited About the Author
Dedication Acknowledgments Preface Father of a Nation/Father of Sons A
Father's Son/A Son of the Nation Authors of Memoirs Manuscripts: The
Production of Meaning and the Performance of Masculinity Chronology Chapter
One: First Publications Toussaint Louverture's Memoir: A Profile in
Racialized Anxiety Prefacing and Appending Toussaint's Memoir: Exposing the
Black Male Body and Diverting Blackness Isaac Louverture's Memoir: A
Representation of Black Masculinity in the Name of the Father Reading and
Writing the Father Re-Reading and Re-Writing the Father Validating Black
Masculinity in the Notes Chapter Two: The Louvertures and the Evolution of
Memoir Writing in France: Personalizing the Historical/Historicizing the
Personal Personalizing the Historical: Revealing Truth in the First Person
Historicizing the Personal: Demonstrating Truth in the Third Person A
Louverturian "Family Romance" Chapter Three: Remembered Injustices: A
Memory of History/The Fiction of Memory Father and Son: Between History and
Memory The Coloring of Memory: The Psychical and Social Construction of
Remembering Toussaint Mis-Remembers: Is There a Constitution in this Text?
Isaac Remembers Napoleon but Mis-Remembers His Brother From Counter-History
to Fictionalization All of Saint-Domingue is a Stage: Toussaint Louverture,
Dramaturge From the Dramatic to the Lyrical: Isaac Louverture, Poet Chapter
Four: Toussaint's Constitution: Power, Memoir Writing, and the Making of
Black Manhood From Constitution to Memoir: A Diagram of Masculine Justice
Power, Race, and Masculine Self-Actualization in the Memoirs of Toussaint
and Isaac Louverture Chapter Five: The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: Toward Narratives of Mourning and Melancholia Psychoanalysis:
Race, Nation, and Masculine Identity The Louvertures : Resisting
Whiteness/Desiring Whiteness The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: The Body of the Father Like Father, Like Son: Desiring
Whiteness/Resisting Whiteness Mourning Becomes the Black Male Subject
Toussaint's Disconsolation/Isaac's Loss Postscript: The Louvertures, Haiti,
and a Diasporic Tradition of Writing the Masculine Self Appendix: "Le jour
de la paix" (Isaac Louverture) Works Cited About the Author
Father's Son/A Son of the Nation Authors of Memoirs Manuscripts: The
Production of Meaning and the Performance of Masculinity Chronology Chapter
One: First Publications Toussaint Louverture's Memoir: A Profile in
Racialized Anxiety Prefacing and Appending Toussaint's Memoir: Exposing the
Black Male Body and Diverting Blackness Isaac Louverture's Memoir: A
Representation of Black Masculinity in the Name of the Father Reading and
Writing the Father Re-Reading and Re-Writing the Father Validating Black
Masculinity in the Notes Chapter Two: The Louvertures and the Evolution of
Memoir Writing in France: Personalizing the Historical/Historicizing the
Personal Personalizing the Historical: Revealing Truth in the First Person
Historicizing the Personal: Demonstrating Truth in the Third Person A
Louverturian "Family Romance" Chapter Three: Remembered Injustices: A
Memory of History/The Fiction of Memory Father and Son: Between History and
Memory The Coloring of Memory: The Psychical and Social Construction of
Remembering Toussaint Mis-Remembers: Is There a Constitution in this Text?
Isaac Remembers Napoleon but Mis-Remembers His Brother From Counter-History
to Fictionalization All of Saint-Domingue is a Stage: Toussaint Louverture,
Dramaturge From the Dramatic to the Lyrical: Isaac Louverture, Poet Chapter
Four: Toussaint's Constitution: Power, Memoir Writing, and the Making of
Black Manhood From Constitution to Memoir: A Diagram of Masculine Justice
Power, Race, and Masculine Self-Actualization in the Memoirs of Toussaint
and Isaac Louverture Chapter Five: The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: Toward Narratives of Mourning and Melancholia Psychoanalysis:
Race, Nation, and Masculine Identity The Louvertures : Resisting
Whiteness/Desiring Whiteness The Fact of Blackness/The Fiction of
Masculinity: The Body of the Father Like Father, Like Son: Desiring
Whiteness/Resisting Whiteness Mourning Becomes the Black Male Subject
Toussaint's Disconsolation/Isaac's Loss Postscript: The Louvertures, Haiti,
and a Diasporic Tradition of Writing the Masculine Self Appendix: "Le jour
de la paix" (Isaac Louverture) Works Cited About the Author