Difference between revisions of "RWBF:Chapter Fourteen Development Notes"
From TLP
m (added links) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | * Haiti's history did not end, of course, in 1804, nor even did the revolution, in a sense. But the true sense of equality and the hope for a prosperous Saint Domingue did seem to end with Louverture and the victory of Dessalines. | + | * [[Haiti]]'s history did not end, of course, in [[1804]], nor even did the revolution, in a sense. But the true sense of equality and the hope for a prosperous [[Saint-Domingue]] did seem to end with Louverture and the victory of Dessalines. |
− | * Malick Ghachem - The Haitian revolution forced historians to talk differently about the American and French revolutions - like why didn't the American Revolution resolve the slave issue? | + | * Malick Ghachem - The Haitian revolution forced historians to talk differently about the American and [[French Revolution|French revolutions]] - like why didn't the American Revolution resolve the slave issue? |
* Seppinwall - Haiti's revolution showed blacks that servitude was not inevitable. | * Seppinwall - Haiti's revolution showed blacks that servitude was not inevitable. |
Latest revision as of 18:47, 21 August 2006
- Haiti's history did not end, of course, in 1804, nor even did the revolution, in a sense. But the true sense of equality and the hope for a prosperous Saint-Domingue did seem to end with Louverture and the victory of Dessalines.
- Malick Ghachem - The Haitian revolution forced historians to talk differently about the American and French revolutions - like why didn't the American Revolution resolve the slave issue?
- Seppinwall - Haiti's revolution showed blacks that servitude was not inevitable.