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black Jacobinism
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Journal Article
Small Axe (2014) 18 (3 (45)): 35–51.
Published: 01 November 2014
... to caution that it is always important to ask about the ideological construction of the theory-problems in our scholarship. The essay then turns to a discussion of the problem-space that makes intelligible why and how C. L. R. James's The Black Jacobins is constructed as an exploration of the Haitian...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2024) 28 (2 (74)): 17–33.
Published: 01 July 2024
... such as Toussaint Louverture and Jean-Jacques Dessalines in C. L. R James’s 1967 dramatic adaptation of his 1938 The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution . Instead, it examines a critical but often neglected character: a fictional woman named Celestine. In a play obsessed...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2019) 23 (3 (60)): 87–103.
Published: 01 November 2019
...Raj Chetty This essay approaches the stage versions of Toussaint Louverture (1934) and The Black Jacobins (1967), first, to emphasize the role of C. L. R. James’s collaborations in the creation of the plays, and second, to argue that the latter version of the play presents a radical feminism...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2011) 15 (2 (35)): 24–42.
Published: 01 July 2011
... their part in the shaping of James's majestic The Black Jacobins . © 2011 by Small Axe, Inc. 2011 “A Thorn in the Side of Great
Britain”: C. L. R. James and
the Caribbean Labour Rebellions
of the 1930s
Christian Høgsbjerg
Robert A. Hill once suggested that C. L. R. James’s The Black...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2010) 14 (3 (33)): 152–162.
Published: 01 November 2010
... something significant about Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit stands or falls on his knowledge of the Haitian Revolution; and the second concerns her curious reading of C.L.R. James' T he Black Jacobins , as mainly “information,” rather than itself an attempt to theorize the Haitian Revolution as universal...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 129–145.
Published: 01 November 2015
...Nick Nesbitt This essay argues that Aimé Césaire remained committed to a nonaligned, tricontinental Marxism well beyond his resignation from the Parti Communiste Français in 1956. It describes this commitment positively in relation to “black Jacobinism” as well as the limitations of Césaire's...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2009) 13 (2): vii–x.
Published: 01 July 2009
... World in Atlanta, through which many Caribbean intellectuals passed and spoke and
exchanged ideas on their formations and their projects. Memorably, C. L. R. James’s lectures
on The Black Jacobins were delivered there in the summer of 1971.1 It seems to me that this
is just one...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2013) 17 (2 (41)): 27–42.
Published: 01 July 2013
..., “That Event, This Memory: Notes on the Anthropology of African Diasporas in the New World,” Diaspora 1, no. 3 (1991): 261–84. 26 James, Black Jacobins , 413 (emphasis mine). 25 Limits of space prevent a comprehensive cataloging of this work here, but an additional corollary to this sort...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2003) 7 (2): 39–70.
Published: 01 September 2003
... in the novel’s structure is unexpected because it breaks
into the larger narrative. I fi rst came across it not in Lamming’s novel but in a radically
diff erent context: in the 1963 appendix to C. L. R. James’s Th e Black Jacobins.³ I have
always been aff ected by James’s afterword...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 182–189.
Published: 01 July 2021
... of this “Caribbean method,” Kamugisha usefully outlines “three broad trends” in Caribbean writing (6), the first being something of a canon in Caribbean critical thought, from The Black Jacobins (C. L. R. James) to Peau noire, masques blancs (Fanon), from Slave Society in the British Leeward Islands at the End...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2015) 19 (3 (48)): 147–162.
Published: 01 November 2015
... beyond the linguistic. The richness of the translational as a tool of analysis in a Caribbean frame became particularly apparent to me in a very different Haiti-focused example, in ongoing work on C. L. R. James's The Black Jacobins . 26 Susan Gillman alludes convincingly to “the multiple acts...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2023) 27 (3 (72)): 66–83.
Published: 01 November 2023
... to be a crime. 19 James, preface to The Black Jacobins , vii. 20 I develop this in chapter 5 of Irreparable Evil . 21 The theme is variously pursued in other important Caribbean work of this conjuncture—see, for example, George Beckford, Persistent Poverty: Underdevelopment in Plantation...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2005) 9 (1): 134–149.
Published: 01 March 2005
...
HHayesayes
black intellectuals, one cannot sidestep the provocative proposition that C. L. R. James EEdwardsdwards
makes most categorically in the appendix to Th e Black Jacobins: “Th e fi rst step to free-
dom was to go abroad I consider this to pose a question, rather than to set the only
possible...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2005) 9 (2): 16–23.
Published: 01 September 2005
..., since he was acutely aware that between 1791 and 1804
a revolutionary ideal had entered the New World and that the Caribbean had become
one of those explosive borders of enlightened modernity. As James vividly reminds us in
Black Jacobins, the Haitian Revolution would take the French Revolution...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (3 (63)): 228–238.
Published: 01 November 2020
..., and this permitted him to situate the self-activity of black workers as a vital force within the revolutionary struggle in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s. 10 But perhaps nowhere is his creative reading of Marx better reflected than in his analysis of slave labor in The Black Jacobins . “The slaves...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2014) 18 (2 (44)): 1–17.
Published: 01 July 2014
... of workers to submit to capitalist command. While James's analysis is focused on Fordist capitalism in US cities such as Detroit, the theoretical roots of this dialectic lay in James's explorations of slavery in the Atlantic world. The Black Jacobins (1938) had already privileged the self-activity...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2007) 11 (2): 177–183.
Published: 01 June 2007
... edition of C. L. R. James’s The
Black Jacobins, this classic work was the second he read about Toussaint Louverture, and “the
main platform” he used to begin writing his trilogy.3 He shares with James, he notes—along
with “a few other people”—an “enduring, even incurable...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2003) 7 (2): 150–158.
Published: 01 September 2003
... Catherine’s
narrative in her introduction and Garvey’s career in her closing paragraph. It brought
home to me, not for the fi rst time, how diffi cult it has proven to be for contemporary
scholars on both sides of the color line to match C. L. R. James’s accomplishment, in
Th e Black Jacobins...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2014) 18 (1 (43)): 55–71.
Published: 01 March 2014
... unable to escape the prejudices they held of the British Caribbean and Haiti. It has long been widely appreciated that the publication of C. L. R. James's masterpiece, The Black Jacobins , in 1938 sounded a new era in Caribbean history writing. In that book Trinidadian writer and Marxist thinker...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2008) 12 (3 (27)): 1–13.
Published: 01 October 2008
.... L. R. James, The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution (1938; reprint, London:
Allison and Busby, 1980), 63.
small axe 27 • October 2008 • p 1–13 • ISSN 0799-0537
2 | SX27 • Interpreting 2004: Politics, Memory, Scholarship
Trouillot, focusing here...
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