Jeremy D. Popkin, T. Marshall Hahn Jr Professor of History at the University of Kentucky, has written numerous books on the French and Haitian Revolutions and on the subject of autobiographical literature, including Revolutionary News: The Press in France, 1789-1799 (1990), History, Historians and Autobiography (2005), and Facing Racial Revolution: Eyewitness Accounts of the Haitian Revolution (2007). He has been a visiting Professor at the College de France (2009) and Brown University (2005) and held numerous fellowships, including awards from the J. S. Guggenheim Foundation, the National Humanities Center, the Fulbright Program, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Institute for Advanced Study, and the Newberry Library.
Introduction: the journée of 20 June 1793 in Cap Français and the abolition of slavery
1. A colony in revolution
2. Municipal revolution in a colonial city
3. French Jacobins and Saint-Domingue colonists
4. Creating revolutionary government in the tropics
5. A model republican general
6. The powderkeg explodes
7. Freedom and fire
8. The road to general emancipation
9. Saint-Domingue in the United States
10. The decree of 16 Pluviôse An II
Conclusion.