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Staging Haiti in Nineteenth-Century America

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Staging Haiti in Nineteenth-Century America Synopsis

American culture maintained a complicated relationship with Haiti from its revolutionary beginnings onward. In this study, Peter P. Reed reveals how Americans embodied and re-enacted their connections to Haiti through a wide array of performance forms. In the wake of Haiti's slave revolts in the 1790s, generations of actors, theatre professionals, spectators, and commentators looked to Haiti as a source of both inspiring freedom and vexing disorder. French colonial refugees, university students, Black theatre stars, blackface minstrels, abolitionists, and even writers such as Herman Melville all reinvented and restaged Haiti in distinctive ways. Reed demonstrates how Haiti's example of Black freedom and national independence helped redefine American popular culture, as actors and audiences repeatedly invoked and suppressed Haiti's revolutionary narratives, characters, and themes. Ultimately, Haiti shaped generations of performances, transforming America's understandings of race, power, freedom, and violence in ways that still reverberate today.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781009100526
Publication date: 1st December 2022
Author: Peter P Reed
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 231 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre
Genres: Theatre studies
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
History of the Americas
History and Archaeology