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Killing the Elites

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Through a rich historical ethnography of a massacre in the small town of Jérémie, Haiti, Jean-Philippe Belleau offers a new account of the workings of the François “Papa Doc” Duvalier regime and an...
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  • 29 October 2024
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In the summer and fall of 1964, a massacre took place in the small town of Jérémie, Haiti. After an ill-fated uprising, the brutal regime of François “Papa Doc” Duvalier ordered reprisals against the town that some of the insurgents were allegedly from. Entire families—all from the town’s upper class—were slaughtered. Through a rich historical ethnography of the massacre, Jean-Philippe Belleau offers a new account of the workings of the Duvalier regime and an innovative analysis of anti-elite violence.

Killing the Elites meticulously reconstructs the various phases of the massacre, identifying the victims and perpetrators, tracing the social ties that linked them, and examining the varying degrees of culpability from the state to bystanders. Although Duvalier and the military were responsible, the killings were attributed to popular social grievances. Examining how the Haitian state has brutalized the upper classes, Belleau develops a new theory of anti-elite violence. He challenges views that ideology or social difference can readily drive people to kill their neighbors and that the upper classes fall victim to popular rough justice, showing that social bonds within the town prevented organized violence from spreading. The state, Belleau underscores, is the primary perpetrator of violence against elites. Drawing on interviews with eyewitnesses and former regime members as well as a wide range of unexplored primary sources, this book provides a new lens on Haiti under Duvalier and reveals why the victimization of the elite is essential to mass violence.

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Price: $140.00
Pages: 400
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 29 October 2024
Trim Size: 9.25 X 6.12 in
ISBN: 9780231213783
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / Haiti, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Violence in Society
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Jean-Philippe Belleau’s Killing the Elites offers an unsurpassed analysis of the repressive and murderous dictatorship of François Duvalier from 1957 to 1971, and that of his son Jean-Claude who ruled until he was overthrown in 1986. Focusing on the massacre of elite families in the southwestern city of Jérémie in 1964, the book brilliantly combines the processes of victimization, the role of social ties, and the targeting of specific members of the elite to offer critical insights into how political power can be deployed and consolidated. A must read.
Jean-Philippe Belleau is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He worked for several years in human rights and diplomacy with the United Nations, the Organization of American States, and NGOs before returning to academia.

Acknowledgments
Victims and Local Protagonists
Introduction
Part I. The Massacre
1. Chronology of the Massacre
Part II. Illegitimate Members of the Nation
2. Constructing the Enemy
3. Othering the Elite
4. A Pattern of Anti-Elite Massacres, 1812–1964
Part III. Murders Among Persons
5. Jérémie’s World
6. The Excelsior
Part IV. Duvalier’s Evading Executioners
7. Kaponaj
8. The Military Commander
9. Bonds that Hold and Bonds to Break
Part V. The Relational Despot
10. The Ruler’s Anxiety
11. Sociocentric Repression
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index