<p>Winner of a 2018 C. L. R. James Award for a Published Book for Academic or General Audiences from the Working-Class Studies Association</p><p>Beginning with the Haitian Revolution Scott Henkel lays out a literary history of direct democracy in the Americas. Much research considers direct democracy as a form of organization fit for worker cooperatives or political movements. Henkel reinterprets it as a type of collective power based on the massive slave revolt in Haiti. In the representations of slaves women and workers Henkel traces a history of power through the literatures of the Americas during the long nineteenth century.</p><p>Thinking about democracy as a type of power presents a challenge to common often bureaucratic and limited interpretations of the term and opens an alternative archive which Henkel argues includes C. L. R. James&#39;s The Black Jacobins Walt Whitman&#39;s Democratic Vistas Lucy Parsons&#39;s speeches advocating for the eight-hour workday B. Traven&#39;s novels of the Mexican Revolution and Marie Vieux Chauvet&#39;s novella about Haitian dictatorship.</p><p>Henkel asserts that each writer recognized this power and represented its physical manifestation as a swarm. This metaphor bears a complicated history often describing a group a movement or a community. Indeed it conveys multiplicity and complexity a collective power. This metaphor&#39;s many uses illustrate Henkel&#39;s main concerns the problems of democracy slavery and labor the dynamics of racial repression and resistance and the issues of power which run throughout the Americas.</p>
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