❤️ loved this book because...
This is an original, exciting entry into the world of a French nobleman in Saint-Domingue (now Haiti): a polymath and a slave owner. Johnson puts his world back together by returning enslaved people to it, demonstrating how their knowledge made his intellect possible. The best kind of academic book, it stretches your brain and teaches you something truly new.
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🐇 I couldn't put it down
2 authors picked Encyclopédie noire as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
If you peer closely into the bookstores, salons, and diplomatic circles of the eighteenth-century Atlantic world, sooner or later Mederic Louis Elie Moreau de Saint-Mery is bound to appear. As a lawyer, philosophe, and Enlightenment polymath, Moreau created and compiled an immense archive that remains a vital window into the fragile social, political, and intellectual fault lines of the Age of Revolutions. But the gilded spines and elegant designs that decorate his archive obscure the truth: Moreau's achievements were, at every turn, predicated upon the work of enslaved and free people of color. Their labor amassed the wealth that afforded…
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