Marlene L. Daut

Author
Marlene L. Daut

Marlene L. Daut

An award-winning author, scholar, and professor specializing in Haitian history and culture, Marlene L. Daut's most recent book, The First and Last King of Haiti: The Rise and Fall of Henry Christophe (Knopf, 2025), a finalist for the Cundill History Prize, explores the fascinating life of Haiti’s only king while delving into the complex history of a 19th-century Caribbean monarchy. Her other books include Tropics of Haiti: Race and the Literary History of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World (Liverpool UP, 2015); Baron de Vastey and the Origins of Black Atlantic Humanism (Palgrave, 2017); and Awakening the Ashes: An Intellectual History of the Haitian Revolution (UNC Press, 2023), co-winner of the Frederick Douglass Book Prize.

Daut's articles on Haitian history and culture have appeared in over a dozen magazines, newspapers, and journals including, The New Yorker (“What’s the Path Forward for Haiti?”), The New York Times (“Napoleon Isn’t a Hero to Celebrate”), Harper’s Bazaar (“Resurrecting a Lost Palace of Haiti”), Essence (“Haiti isn’t Cursed. It is Exploited”), The Nation (“What the French Really Owe Haiti”), and the LA Review of Books (“Why did Bridgerton Erase Haiti?”). She has been the recipient of several awards, grants, and fellowships for her contributions to historical and cultural understandings of the Caribbean, notably from the Ford Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Haitian Studies Association, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and from the Robert Silvers Foundation for The First and Last King of Haiti. 

Daut graduated from Loyola Marymount University with a B.A. in English and French in 2002 and went on to teach in Rouen, France as an Assistante d’Anglais before enrolling at the University of Notre Dame, where she earned a Ph.D. in English in 2009. Since graduating, she has taught Haitian and French colonial history and culture at the University of Miami, the Claremont Graduate University, and the University of Virginia, where she also became and remains series editor of New World Studies at UVA Press. In July 2022, she was appointed as Professor of French and Black Studies at Yale University.

She lives in the New Haven, CT area with her spouse and children.

Books

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The First and Last King of Haiti

The Rise and Fall of Henry Christophe

Winner of the 2025 Haitian Studies Association Book Prize

Finalist for the 2025 Cundill History Prize

A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year

A Washington Independent Review of Books Favorite Book of 2025

California Review of Books’ 10 Best Books of 2025

An Amazon Editors' Pick in Biography & Memoir

A Publisher's Weekly Editors' Pick in...

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The First and Last King of Haiti (UK edition)

The Rise and Fall of Henry Christophe

The dramatic story of a pivotal figure in the Haitian Revolution, who shook the Atlantic world to its core.

Born to an enslaved mother in Grenada, Henry Christophe first fought to overthrow the British in North America, before joining the Black freedom fighters of Saint-Domingue in their quest to gain independence from France. But, at one point,...

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Awakening the Ashes

An Intellectual History of the Haitian Revolution

Co-winner, Frederick Douglass Book Prize, awarded by the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition

Gold Prize, Independent Publishers of New England (IPNE)

Named a finalist for the 2024 Pauli Murray Book Prize in Black Intellectual History

Honorable mention for the 2024 Mary Alice and Philip Boucher Book Prize at the...

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Other Writing

Five Essential Books For Understanding Haitian History Cundill Prize

Cundill Prize Finalist Marlene L. Daut Recommends Baron de Vastey, Jean Casimir, Louis Joseph Janvier and More

Marlene L. Daut

October 20, 2025

After waging a thirteen-year revolution against slavery in the French colony of Saint-Domingue, the island’s Black freedom fighters declared their independence on January 1, 1804. In the country’s first constitution, issued one year later, the newly renamed Haiti subsequently became the first nation in the modern world to permanently abolish slavery. In...

200 years ago, France extorted Haiti in one of history’s greatest heists –

In 2002, Haiti’s former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide argued that France should pay his country US$21 billion.

The reason? In 1825, France extracted a huge indemnity from the young nation, in exchange for recognition of its independence.

April 17, 2025, marks the 200th anniversary of that indemnity agreement. On Jan. 1 of this year, the now-former president of Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council, Leslie Voltaire, reminded France of this call when he requested that France “repay the...

How Haiti Destroyed Slavery and Led the Way to Freedom Throughout the

In this series commissioned by Marlene L. Daut, scholars reveal what 220 years of Haitian independence means for how we tell the story of abolition and the development of human rights around the world.

BY MARLENE L. DAUT

The first land to be colonized in the Americas was Haiti. Europeans first enslaved native Americans and captive Africans there, too. But the first permanent abolition of slavery also happened on Haiti, in 1804: 220 years ago this month. Such abolition only occurred in the rest...

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Latest Updates

Check out Mathilde Demoisel's new documentary, "Blood, Sweat, and Sugar"

I recently appeared in Mathilde Demoisel's documentary Blood, Sweat, and Sugar (Le Sucre, pour la douceur et pour le pire)

Here is a brief description:

What is the price of...

The Atlantic links to "The First and Last King of Haiti" If you happen to

If you happen to read this review of Rich Benjamin's book, Talk to Me: Lessons from a Family Forged by History (which I just purchased and I'm looking forward to reading!), you...

I spoke to Amy Bracken of PRX The World about how "Haitian ordnance ended

How Haitian ordnance wound up in the Adirondack Mountains

New York’s Fort Ticonderoga is celebrated for the artillery it contributed to the American Revolution. Less known,...

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Blog

The Deadly Seriousness of Reading and Learning By  MARLENE L. DAUT“I

By MARLENE L. DAUT

“I come back to the deadly seriousness of intellectual work. It is a deadly serious matter.”—STUART HALL, “Cultural Studies and its Theoretical Legacies” (1992)

This January has certainly been an eventful one, both politically, and perhaps, in a cosmic attempt to match the ongoing governmental mayhem we are facing, meteorologically as well. We recently had a major winter storm here in Connecticut that dumped about 18 inches of snow, sleet, and ice on the city where I live,...

OTD IN HAITIAN HISTORY  (JANUARY 21, 1781): BIRTH OF HAITI'S MOST PROMINENT

BY MARLENE L. DAUT

“If injustice, bad faith, and cruelties of all kinds, give rights to those who have experienced them, over those who have perpetrated them, what people have ever had more right to independence than the Haitian people?”—BARON DE VASTEY, Réflexions sur une lettre de Mazères (1816)


In the April 22, 1922 edition of the famous Harlem Renaissance era magazine, The Negro World, Eric Walrond recalled a visit he made to the Puerto Rican American bibliophile, collector, and scholar...

Whose Story Gets to Be Told? : The King of Haiti in the Work of Tavares

By Marlene L. Daut

In my first blog post of 2026, I want to mark the fact that today is the one-year anniversary of the publication of The First and Last King of Haiti. I remember last year at this very time, I was busy trying to finish up my syllabi for the impending semester (check, for this year too!), as I anxiously awaited the possible publication of early reviews and/or for a few podcast episodes I had pre-recorded to drop. In truth, I spent most of the day in a state of ambivalent...

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Events

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

4:00 PM ET

Readings and more information

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Register Here

Join us on Wednesday, February 4, 2026 at 4:00 PM Eastern for a live webinar with Professor Marlene Daut, Professor of French and African Diaspora Studies. In this session, Professor Daut will discuss her newly published book, The First and Last King of Haiti: The Rise and Fall of Henry Christophe, which brings to life one of the most extraordinary—and misunderstood—figures of the Age of Revolution. From...

Marlene Daut – A Revolutionary Legacy: Haiti’s King Henry Christophe

February 12 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

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Register here: https://www.historysymposium.com/marlene-daut/

This event will occur on February 18, 2026 at 5:00 PM in the Mortara Center for International Studies, 3600 N St NW, DC 20057.

“America250: Worlds of Revolution” is a part of the Georgetown University Global Humanities Faculty Seminar Series, co-sponsored by the Global Irish Studies Initiative, the Office of the Vice President for Global Engagement, the Department of History, the Walsh School of Foreign Service, and the Mortara Center for International Studies.

More details to come soon!

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