- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword
-
Introduction From Saint-Domingue to Haiti: Eyewitness Narratives of the Haitian Revolution -
Chapter 1 Becoming a Slavemaster -
Chapter 2 The Ogé Insurrection -
Chapter 3 The First Days of the Slave Insurrection -
Chapter 4 A Poet in the Midst of Insurrection: “Mon Odyssée” -
Chapter 5 An Expedition against the Insurgents in November 1791 -
Chapter 6 Inside the Insurgency: Gros's Historick Recital -
Chapter 7 Prisoners of the Insurgents in 1792 -
Chapter 8 Fighting and Atrocities in the South Province in 1792–1793 -
Chapter 9 Masters and Their Slaves during the Insurrection -
Chapter 10 The Destruction of Cap Français in June 1793 -
Chapter 11 A Colonist at Sea, 1793 -
Chapter 12 Imagining the Motives behind the Insurrection -
Chapter 13 A Colonist Among the Spanish and the British -
Chapter 14 A White Captive in the Struggle against the Leclerc Expedition -
Chapter 15 A Family Reunion and a Religious Conversion -
Chapter 16 A Woman's View of the Last Days of Cap Français -
Chapter 17 A Child's Memories of the Last Days of Saint-Domingue -
Chapter 18 A Survivor of Dessalines's Massacres in 1804 -
Chapter 19 The Story of the Last French Survivors in Saint-Domingue - Bibliography of Text Sources
- Index
The Ogé Insurrection
The Ogé Insurrection
- Chapter:
- (p.43) Chapter 2 The Ogé Insurrection
- Source:
- Facing Racial Revolution
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
This chapter presents an excerpt from a first-person narrative which is about the role of Vincent Oge, a free man of color, in the Haitian revolution. It discusses Oge's organization of a short-lived uprising of the free-colored population of Saint-Domingue in October 1790 when the white colonists persisted in excluding free men of color from political participation. This personal account suggests that Oge's insurrection was not directed against the institution of slavery but it was the first armed protest movement against the colonial racial order to appeal explicitly to the principles of liberty and equality proclaimed by the French National Assembly.
Keywords: Vincent Oge, Haitian revolution, Saint-Domingue, men of color, political participation, insurrection, slavery, armed protest, colonial racial order, French National Assembly
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword
-
Introduction From Saint-Domingue to Haiti: Eyewitness Narratives of the Haitian Revolution -
Chapter 1 Becoming a Slavemaster -
Chapter 2 The Ogé Insurrection -
Chapter 3 The First Days of the Slave Insurrection -
Chapter 4 A Poet in the Midst of Insurrection: “Mon Odyssée” -
Chapter 5 An Expedition against the Insurgents in November 1791 -
Chapter 6 Inside the Insurgency: Gros's Historick Recital -
Chapter 7 Prisoners of the Insurgents in 1792 -
Chapter 8 Fighting and Atrocities in the South Province in 1792–1793 -
Chapter 9 Masters and Their Slaves during the Insurrection -
Chapter 10 The Destruction of Cap Français in June 1793 -
Chapter 11 A Colonist at Sea, 1793 -
Chapter 12 Imagining the Motives behind the Insurrection -
Chapter 13 A Colonist Among the Spanish and the British -
Chapter 14 A White Captive in the Struggle against the Leclerc Expedition -
Chapter 15 A Family Reunion and a Religious Conversion -
Chapter 16 A Woman's View of the Last Days of Cap Français -
Chapter 17 A Child's Memories of the Last Days of Saint-Domingue -
Chapter 18 A Survivor of Dessalines's Massacres in 1804 -
Chapter 19 The Story of the Last French Survivors in Saint-Domingue - Bibliography of Text Sources
- Index