Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: The Caribbean Critical Imperative
- I Tropical Equality: The Politics of Principle
- II Critique of Caribbean Violence
- 6 Jacobinism, Black Jacobinism, and the Foundations of Political Violence
- 7 The Baron de Vastey and the Contradictions of Scribal Critique
- 8 Revolutionary Inhumanism: Fanon's On Violence
- 9 Aristide and the Politics of Democratization
- III The Critique of Relation
- Conclusion: The Incandescent I, Destroyer of Worlds
- Appendix: Letter of Jean-François, Belair, and Biassou/Toussaint, July 1792
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Jacobinism, Black Jacobinism, and the Foundations of Political Violence
from II - Critique of Caribbean Violence
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: The Caribbean Critical Imperative
- I Tropical Equality: The Politics of Principle
- II Critique of Caribbean Violence
- 6 Jacobinism, Black Jacobinism, and the Foundations of Political Violence
- 7 The Baron de Vastey and the Contradictions of Scribal Critique
- 8 Revolutionary Inhumanism: Fanon's On Violence
- 9 Aristide and the Politics of Democratization
- III The Critique of Relation
- Conclusion: The Incandescent I, Destroyer of Worlds
- Appendix: Letter of Jean-François, Belair, and Biassou/Toussaint, July 1792
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
If critique denotes in the Caribbean tradition the struggle to bring together a transcendental position of analysis and judgment over a given situation, with the effective means to intervene within that situation for its transformation, the promise of a critique of Caribbean violence is to allow us to distinguish legitimate from illegitimate violence, to sort and discriminate (from the Greek krinein) the rightful expression of power from the proscribed categories of illicit domination. If Kantian critique sought to establish and police the borders of legitimate reason, the critique of Caribbean violence has repeatedly rejected the transhistorical demarcation of the a priori conditions of reason, pure, moral, and aesthetic. Kant's critique of reason is
a court of justice, by which reason may secure its rightful claims while dismissing all groundless pretentions […] according to its own eternal and unchangeable laws; [this critique is] only negative, serving not for the amplification, but only for the purification of our reason, and for keeping it free from errors. (Kant 1997: 101, 133)
For Kant, critique is the tribunal overseeing the faculty of reason, the three critiques, the restrictive compendium of law, preventive and limitative in its function. Within this system, Kant's defense of the French Revolution, described above, cogently refuses the legitimacy of any and all popular revolt, whether with democratic or reactionary intent, to reaffirm the sole legitimacy of the law itself, grounding his defense of 1789 in the quasi-miraculous exception of Louis XIV's abdication of sovereignty (in calling the États généraux) rather than the popular revolts of July 1789 or August 1792.
The lived experience of plantation slavery made any respect for the law on the part of the enslaved absolutely unbearable. C. L. R. James's description is still unsurpassed:
Though one could trap them like animals […] stable them and starve them, they remained, despite their black skins and curly hair, quite invincibly human beings.
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- Information
- Caribbean CritiqueAntillean Critical Theory from Toussaint to Glissant, pp. 159 - 172Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013