Caryn Cosse Bell is professor emeritus of history at the University of Massachusetts Lowell and associate scholar at the Ethel & Herman L. Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at the University of New Orleans. She is the author of numerous books on francophone Louisiana, including Revolution, Romanticism, and the Afro-Creole Protest Tradition in Louisiana, 1718-1868.
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"Caryn Cosse Bell's new book is an interesting, smart, at times truly original work that serves as a potent and meaningful follow-up to her excellent first book. . . . It brings forth a new way to define New Orleans as a truly vibrant, undeniably Atlantic city. . . . This book deserves consideration by all students of New Orleans and its cultural, racial, and intellectual lives."--American Historical Review "That transnational revolutionary circuits ran through and influenced New Orleans via waves of politically active migrants and refugees, most notably from Haiti in 1809-1810, is a historiographical truism. . . . Through a kaleidoscope of lives and associations, Bell crafts an approachable synthesis where the ideological currents that fed the long civil rights movement become a generational epic."--Journal of Southern History

