Fr. 69.50

Direct Democracy - Collective Power, the Swarm, and the Literatures of the Americas

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Winner of a 2018 C. L. R. James Award for a Published Book for Academic or General Audiences from the Working-Class Studies Association
Beginning with the Haitian Revolution, Scott Henkel lays out a literary history of direct democracy in the Americas. Much research considers direct democracy as a form of organization fit for worker cooperatives or political movements. Henkel reinterprets it as a type of collective power, based on the massive slave revolt in Haiti. In the representations of slaves, women, and workers, Henkel traces a history of power through the literatures of the Americas during the long nineteenth century.
Thinking about democracy as a type of power presents a challenge to common, often bureaucratic and limited interpretations of the term and opens an alternative archive, which Henkel argues includes C. L. R. James's The Black Jacobins, Walt Whitman's Democratic Vistas, Lucy Parsons's speeches advocating for the eight-hour workday, B. Traven's novels of the Mexican Revolution, and Marie Vieux Chauvet's novella about Haitian dictatorship.
Henkel asserts that each writer recognized this power and represented its physical manifestation as a swarm. This metaphor bears a complicated history, often describing a group, a movement, or a community. Indeed it conveys multiplicity and complexity, a collective power. This metaphor's many uses illustrate Henkel's main concerns, the problems of democracy, slavery, and labor, the dynamics of racial repression and resistance, and the issues of power which run throughout the Americas.

About the author










Scott Henkel is director of the Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research and associate professor in the Department of English and the Department of African American and Diaspora Studies at the University of Wyoming. His research has appeared in the journals Walt Whitman Quarterly Review; Workplace: A Journal of Academic Labor; and Chiricú Journal: Latina/o Literatures, Arts, and Cultures, as well as the edited volumes Problems of Democracy: Language and Speaking and The Grapes of Wrath: A Reconsideration.

Summary

Beginning with the Haitian Revolution, Scott Henkel lays out a literary history of direct democracy in the Americas. Henkel reinterprets direct democracy as a type of collective power. In the representations of slaves, women, and workers, Henkel traces a history of power through the literatures of the Americas during the long nineteenth century.

Product details

Authors Scott Henkel
Publisher University of mississippi pres
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.06.2019
 
EAN 9781496823410
ISBN 978-1-4968-2341-0
No. of pages 222
Series Caribbean Studies
Caribbean Studies
Caribbean Studies Series
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Romance linguistics / literary studies

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