Universitaire,
Marlène Daut a publié un nouvel ouvrage sur le
baron de
Vastey. Elle y fait de nombreuses références
à
notre biographie...

Focusing on the influential life and works of the Haitian
political writer and statesman, Baron de Vastey (1781-1820), in this
book Marlene L. Daut examines the legacy of Vastey’s
extensive writings as a form of what she calls black Atlantic humanism,
a discourse devoted to attacking the enlightenment foundations of
colonialism. Daut argues that Vastey, the most important secretary of
Haiti’s King Henry Christophe, was a pioneer in a tradition
of deconstructing colonial racism and colonial slavery that is much
more closely associated with twentieth-century writers like W.E.B. Du
Bois, Frantz Fanon, and Aimé Césaire. By expertly
forging exciting new historical and theoretical connections among
Vastey and these later twentieth-century writers, as well as
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century black Atlantic authors, such as
Phillis Wheatley, Olaudah Equiano, William Wells Brown, and Harriet
Jacobs, Daut proves that any understanding of the genesis of
Afro-diasporic thought must include Haiti’s Baron de Vastey.
