Difference between revisions of "RWBF:Chapter Two"

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'''Chapter Summary:''' ''Chapter Two is devoted to providing the reader further context for the history.  This time, we'll try to smash the reader's preconceptions of Haiti by drawing pictures of the economic, political, racial, physical, and social environment of Haiti in 1789.  We will present these pictures in the light of Americans' current and historical perspective.  At the end of these two chapters, I want the reader to be thinking as if he were a resident of Saint-Domingue in the years before the revolution.''<br style="clear:both;">
 
'''Chapter Summary:''' ''Chapter Two is devoted to providing the reader further context for the history.  This time, we'll try to smash the reader's preconceptions of Haiti by drawing pictures of the economic, political, racial, physical, and social environment of Haiti in 1789.  We will present these pictures in the light of Americans' current and historical perspective.  At the end of these two chapters, I want the reader to be thinking as if he were a resident of Saint-Domingue in the years before the revolution.''<br style="clear:both;">
  
[[Category:The Revolution Will Be Forgotten]]
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[[Category:The Revolution Will Be Forgotten|2.0]]

Revision as of 21:17, 8 September 2004

Chapter Two: Haiti Is and Isn't Haiti

The Revolution Will Be Forgotten
Introduction

Chapter One: The Haitian Revolution in a Nutshell
Chapter Two: Haiti Is and Isn't Haiti
Chapter Three: Bois Caiman: The Revolution is Called to Order
Chapter Four: What the Heck Was Going On in France?
Chapter Five: Louverture Enters the Fray
Chapter Six: Sonthonax, Laveaux, et al
Chapter Seven: America: Edward Stevens and Adams' Constitution
Chapter Eight: The British are Conquered; Pax Louverture
Chapter Nine: France Wakes Up and Smells No Coffee
Chapter Ten: Betrayal Sparks the Final Push for Independence
Chapter Eleven: Repercussions: The Americas and the Caribbean
Chapter Twelve: Repercussions: Britain and France
Chapter Thirteen: Haiti's Ongoing Struggle
Chapter Fourteen: True Heroes of the Forgotten Revolution
Sidebars
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Section One - Under Development
Section Two - Under Development
Section Three - Under Development


Chapter Summary: Chapter Two is devoted to providing the reader further context for the history. This time, we'll try to smash the reader's preconceptions of Haiti by drawing pictures of the economic, political, racial, physical, and social environment of Haiti in 1789. We will present these pictures in the light of Americans' current and historical perspective. At the end of these two chapters, I want the reader to be thinking as if he were a resident of Saint-Domingue in the years before the revolution.