Haitian Revolution Case Study

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Is the Haitian Revolution a Traditional One According to Brinton’s Anatomy? “Through the struggle, the Haitian people ultimately won independence from France and thereby became the first country to be founded by former slaves” (Britannica). Thousands and thousands of slaves revolted and gained their independence during the Haitian Revolution. What induced their success? Brinton’s Anatomy of Revolution is the “outline” or set of steps that all revolutions seem to follow. A number of conditions such as the second condition (people feel restless and held down by unacceptable restrictions in society, religion, the economy or the government) and the fifth condition (the social classes closest to one another are the most hostile), the Haitian
All revolutions must start somewhere, in Brinton’s Anatomy of a Revolution one of the primary conditions is when the people want a change and do anything they can to receive that change. When looking at the Haitian Revolution it is clear where the people needed a change and by what means they were willing to achieve just that. The working conditions of the slaves on the plantations were ghastly. “Wealthy white French landowners supervised plantations worked by hundreds of thousands of slaves, the majority of whom were African-born” (Maxwell). Thousands and thousands of slaves had to work in unfair conditions solely due to the fact that plantations were the main source of
One thing that is similar to the stages in Brinton’s Anatomy and the Haitian Revolution is the stage where a great man rises to power to lead the people. “In the late 1790s Toussaint Louverture, a military leader, and former slave, gained control of several areas and earned the initial support of French agents” (“Haitian Revolution”). One inconsistency can be seen with the type of leader the Haitian Revolution had. Toussaint Louverture switched sides once he saw that things finally might go his way. When a sudden slave revolt began in the northern province (August 1791) and soon spread to encompass thousands of slaves across the colony, Toussaint was at first uncommitted” (Fagg). In addition to this, Toussaint also still worked people as slaves on plantations (Finkelman) and everyone was expected to work “As soon as a child can walk, he shouldn’t be employed on the plantation according to his strength in some useful work (Doc D). Even though people aren’t okay with it they don’t revolt against him, which is another inconsistency with Brinton’s Anatomy.
Brinton’s Anatomy of a Revolution is a simple way to map out important events in a revolution. Many aspects of the Haitian Revolution may line up like the need for a change and one leader rising to power. But other

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