In Looking for Other Worlds: Black Feminism and Haitian Fiction (2022), Régine Jean-Charles evokes revolutionary figures such as Sanité Bélair and Victoria Montou, who fought in the Haitian Revolution. She also revisits the legacy of Marie-Jeanne Lamartinière, who was said to have fought back a siege by the French army during the Revolution. Remembering these women is critical, not only because of the ideals they represented—liberation, justice, and power—but also because of their embrace of armed self-defense. Remembering them serves to locate the scope, ethics, and praxis of revolutionary Haitian feminism and lays the groundwork for solidarity with other decolonial movements, from Turtle Island to Palestine. This review essay asks, What might it mean to extend Jean-Charles’s celebration of revolutionary fighters Bélair, Montou, and Lamartinière into the present?
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Book Review|
November 01 2024
The Fire This Time
Nathalie Batraville
Nathalie Batraville is an associate professor at Concordia University’s Simone de Beauvoir Institute. She teaches in the areas of Black feminisms, sexuality studies, and prison abolition. Her scholarship has appeared in the Journal of Haitian Studies, the CLR James Journal, TOPIA, and Tangence. Her first book, Disruptive Agency: Towards a Black Feminist Anarchism, is forthcoming from Duke University Press. In her ceramic arts practice, she explores storytelling, Black liberation, plant life, and rebellion.
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Small Axe (2024) 28 (3 (75)): 206–214.
Citation
Nathalie Batraville; The Fire This Time. Small Axe 1 November 2024; 28 (3 (75)): 206–214. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-11592765
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