The Enslaver Enslaved: The Black Dominator in Creole Louisiana
Love, sex, betrayal, and revenge abound in works written by 19th century Louisiana’s gens de couleur libres – free people of color. Written and published in French journals and newspapers, in New Orleans and Paris, these narratives constitute a remarkable part of American literature that has remained largely unexamined. The authors go beyond the titillating tales to offer biting critique of slavery, advocate for racial and economic justice, and diligently humanize the black experience. This talk will illuminate the ways in which Victor Séjour, Joseph-Colastin Rousseau, Adolphe Duhart, and François-Michel-Samuel Snaër, inspiring themselves from the French and the Haitian Revolutions, dared to reimagine provocative possibilities for themselves and for future generations, in which black personhood, whether at home or in the diaspora, emerges unsullied from the spoils of oppression and jubilantly blossoms.
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