La neutralité historiographique de Beaubrun Ardouin : une lecture critique à partir de la distribution des sentiments
Beaubrun Ardouin’s Historiographic Neutrality: A Critical Reading Through the Distribution of Sentiments By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson * (Le Français suit) The question of historiographic neutrality in Beaubrun Ardouin’s Études sur l’histoire d’Haïti is both important and difficult. Ardouin has long been regarded as one of the foundational historians of Haiti, a writer whose work preserves indispensable details about the Revolution, the early state, and the political struggles of the nineteenth century. Yet like all historians—especially those writing close to the events they narrate—Ardouin does not stand outside history. He writes from within a field of memory, political judgment, and social positioning. The issue, then, is not whether he is “biased” in some crude sense, but whether the distribution of sentiments in his text suggests significant departures from historiographic neutrality . A sentiment-based reading of the passages devoted to Toussaint Louverture,...