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A Haiti Anthology: libète

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352 pages, Paperback

Published May 1, 1999

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Charles Arthur

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Fenn Lilley.
16 reviews
June 5, 2025
A bit too reliant on secondary and foreign sources but a good introduction to Haitian history
Profile Image for Purple Iris.
1,084 reviews4 followers
March 19, 2012
This is a very engaging read, which leads me to believe that the excerpts are well selected. Only 1/3 of the texts in the first chapter are from primary sources, however, which I find a bit problematic.

Not only are there too many secondary sources, but there are way too many texts written by foreigners. It really skews the perspective, especially since there is tons of stuff out there written by Haitians.

I love how the Accras, Bigios, Behrmanns, Apaids, and Madsens are "lesser-known members of the Haitian oligarchy" (p. 79). To me, this illustrates the problem with using primarily non-Haitian sources.

The Magic Island Really? There is not a less offensive text out there that could be used to explain the lakou phenomenon? C'mon now.

I do like that the excerpts are pretty short, for the most part.

This book could help me make a "what not to read list". A lot of the excerpts are offensive, and a lot are just wrong, which makes me angry. If this is about introducing people to Haiti, how can you present false information? To be clear, I'm not talking about political slants here, or anything like that. I mean erroneous translations of Haitian Creole words and phrases. Linguistic misinterpretations and the like.

Aand I've heard good things about Amy Wilentz's book, but after reading what's excerpted here, I'm tempted to take it off of my to-read list.

This is the kind of stuff that drives me nuts: "To some extent, exile was beginning to make this writing les authentically Haitian, even as writing on the inside became more self-consciously Haitian in the use of a Haitian language and world view" (292-293). I mean, really... who gets to judge who's authentically Haitian? Dash? And, I'm supposed to believe that before the 1960's Haitian literature was not written in a Haitian language? did not translate Haitian worldviews? Lord, my eyes might just roll right out of my head.

Another gem: a decade after the end of Duvalierism, Dash notes "the absence of a literary and intellectual culture which has remained outside the country." (293). What the fuck? This is 1996 he's talking about. There are books being published, poetry nights being held, book festivals being inaugurated... Maybe he never visited?

Some of the translations are horrid.

I don't like the idea of ending with the chapter on the visitors' perspective.

Okay, I will be back sometime to pull this review together. Overall, probably 2.5 stars

Looks like this is as pulled together as it's going to get! :)
Profile Image for Bryan Beauchamp.
20 reviews6 followers
July 15, 2011
Though it was published over 10 years ago, liberte was a good companion book when traveling and experiencing the land and people of Haiti. The collection of essays made for quick short reading. Haiti has a long and complicated history, and anyone traveling there will get much more out of the experience if the make an effort to understand that history. This book got passed around by the members if my group while we where there, and all felt the book enhanced our understanding of what we where seeing.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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