Creole New Orleans in the Revolutionary Atlantic, 1775-1877

LSU PRESSISBN: 9780807179376

Price:
Sale price$116.00
Stock:
Temporarily out of stock. Order now & we'll deliver when available

By Caryn Cosse Bell
Imprint:
LSU PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
270 g
Pages:
344

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

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.

"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

You may also like

Recently viewed