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Haitians and African Americans (Paperback)
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Haitians and African Americans (Paperback)
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"In this well-documented and perceptively argued analysis, Leon D.
Pamphile straightforwardly examines multifaceted aspects of the
relations between African Americans and Haitians both at home and
abroad and insightfully shows how these two subalternized groups
have inscribed chunks of their histories inside the genealogies of
each other's life trajectories."--Michel S. Laguerre, University of
California, Berkeley In this first comprehensive study of the
relations between Haiti and black America from the colonial period
to the present, Leon Pamphile shows how historical ties between
these two communities of the African diaspora have affected their
respective histories, cultures, and community lives. Spanning some
200 years of relations between Haiti and African Americans,
Pamphile's study is valuable for its thorough grounding in primary
material, offering especially detailed treatments of 19th-century
relations. He examines perceptions of Haiti in the United States
during the debate over emancipation and slavery in the first half
of that century and Haiti's role as a model in the struggle for
liberation and then an asylum for many escaping oppression in the
United States. His treatment of the decades from emancipation into
the early 20th century, as descendants of African slaves struggled
for legitimacy and respect in the post-slavery setting, is
similarly meticulous. He highlights efforts to rehabilitate and
elevate the black communities as well as dilemmas posed to African
American leaders who defended Haitian independence during the U.S.
occupation of 1915-34 and then sought to promote economic
development on the island. He also treats relations between Haitian
Americans and African Americans in major U.S. cities such as
Baltimore, New Orleans, Charleston, and Philadelphia and traces the
changing view of African American leaders toward Haiti during the
Duvalier and post-Duvalier period as well as the role played by
African American leaders in the U.S.-Haiti policy debate. His
account covers individuals and events up to the period immediately
following the multinational intervention of 1994. Pamphile
demonstrates that Haiti and the African American community, though
separated by national cultures, remained linked by the common
experience of slavery and its aftermath. His detailed accounts of
these connections in the areas of politics, agriculture, performing
arts, religion, and family organization will provide valuable
insights to scholars working in Caribbean and American history and
foreign policy and in race relations. Leon D. Pamphile is the
founder and executive director of the Functional Literacy Ministry,
which provides reading materials and instruction in Haiti. He is
the author of "La Croix et le Glaive: L'Eglise Catholique sous
l'Occupation Americaine," winner of the 1990 book prize from the
Historical and Geographical Society of Haiti, and of "Education en
Haiti sous l'Occupation Americaine, 1915-1934."
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