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         Haiti Culture:     more books (33)
  1. Taking Haiti: Military Occupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism, 1915-1940 by Mary A. Renda, 2001-06-18
  2. Haiti (Cultures of the World) by Roseline Ngcheong-Lum, Leslie Jermyn, 2005-12
  3. Haiti (Discovering Cultures) by Wil Mara, 2007-02-28
  4. Culture and Customs of Haiti (Culture and Customs of Latin America and the Caribbean) by J. Michael Dash, 2000-10-30
  5. Haiti (Countries & Cultures) by Kerry A. Graves, 2006-01
  6. Haiti in Focus: A Guide to the People, Politics, and Culture (In Focus Guides) by Charles Arthur, 2002-01-18
  7. Excavations in the Ft. Liberte Region, Haiti; Culture of the Ft. Liberte Region, Haiti (YALE UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, NUMBERS 23 & 24) by FROELICH; IRVING ROUSE RAINEY, 1941
  8. Dancing in Haiti: come for the beaches, the culture and art.(ESSAY): An article from: National Catholic Reporter by Eileen Markey, 2007-07-20
  9. Culture et dictature en Haiti: L'imaginaire sous controle by Laennec Hurbon, 1979
  10. Modernity Disavowed: Haiti and the Cultures of Slavery in the Age of Revolution (A John Hope Franklin Center Book) by Sibylle Fischer, 2004-03
  11. Callaloo: Haiti: The Literature and Culture by Charles H.,Editor Rowell, 1992
  12. Haiti Singing (Library of Latin-American History and Culture) by Harold Courlander, 1973-06
  13. Paroles et Lumieres-Where Light Speaks: Haiti by Carl Hiebert, 1999-09-15
  14. Executive Report on Strategies in Haiti, 2000 edition (Strategic Planning Series) by Haiti Research Group, The Haiti Research Group, 2000-11-02

81. Jodila - [Arts Et Culture] HAITI N'EXISTE PAS
Contribution de karukeragirl, Arts et culture. Séance de
http://www.jodila.com/article_1584.html
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Recherche avancée Agenda Juin 2004 D L M M J V S Rechercher sur l'annuaire des sites Antillais HAITI N'EXISTE PAS Webmaster Contribution de karukeragirl Séance de dédicace du livre Haïti n’existe pas 1804-2004 : deux cents ans de solitude Le Samedi 14 Février 2004 à partir de 17h30 A l’Espace Culturel "BE ZOUK" 36 bis rue de Montreuil - 75011 PARIS M° Faidherbe-Chaligny, ligne 8 Téléphone 01 43 67 67 17 be-zouk@wanadoo.fr Présentation Haïti a disparu. Effacé. De notre mémoire, de la mémoire. Haïti est une réalité pour les Haïtiens, une réputation pour les autres, et encore…

82. Cultural Insights: Haiti - Cultural Context
This pilot version includes 50 countries. Your country Cultural Insights haiti. Ingeneral, I think Canadians know very little about haiti or its culture.
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/cfsi-icse/cil-cai/inter-source/cc-en.asp?iso=ht

83. Cultural Insights: Haiti - Workplace
Your country Cultural Insights haiti. If one is visiting haiti outside ofthe capital city these are the people who typify true haitian culture.
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/cfsi-icse/cil-cai/inter-source/w-en.asp?iso=ht

84. Bits Of Culture - Haiti
Bits of culture. PointTo-Talk Booklets. Additional Resources. BITS OF culture -haiti. Languages. Geography. Cultural Values. Main Religion Death Concepts/Rituals.
http://www.mgh.harvard.edu/interpreters/b_hai.asp
BITS OF CULTURE - Haiti Languages Geography Cultural Values Health Care Values ... Interesting Facts Languages French,
French Creole
Geography
Cultural Values
Health Care Values
Diet
Interesting Facts

85. Regional, Caribbean, Haiti Society And Culture
RegionalCaribbeanSociety and culture. Child Slavery In haiti Restaveks - Thereare over 300,000 slave children throughout haiti suffering abuse unheard of
http://www.combose.com/Regional/Caribbean/Haiti/Society_and_Culture/

86. 2004 Haiti Cruise And International Cultural Festival Will Celebrate Rebellion
tribute to haiti is long overdue and needs to be acknowledged and celebrated, especiallyin view of the related French influence on our culture in Louisiana
http://www.black-collegian.com/extracurricular/calendar/haiti702.shtml
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2004 Haiti Cruise and International Cultural Festival Will Celebrate Rebellion
by Robert G. Miller
August 14 - 21, 2004 A nationally noted political activist, Ron Daniels, is drumming up support in New Orleans for a cruise to Haiti in 2004 to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Haitian Revolution. The cruise, tentatively scheduled for August 14-21, 2004, will feature an international black arts and cultural festival on sea and land. Several community leaders from New Orleans will be involved, including former New Orleans Mayor Marc Morial, Badi Murphy, associate producer of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Ron Chisom, executive director of The People's Institute for Survival and Beyond, and Mtumishi St. Julien, a community activist. In a recent visit to New Orleans and briefing at the Ashe Cultural Center, Daniels, executive director of the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York City, said the largest slave rebellion in the Western Hemisphere was brought to a close in 1804 as Haitian rebels defeated, in succession, military forces from Spain, Britain and France. Daniels said it was a proud day for the former French slave colony, and the defeat ended Napoleon's quest to conquer the world.

87. Haiti In Cuba
Creole language and culture first entered Cuba with the arrival of haitian immigrantsat the start of the nineteenth century. haiti was a French colony, and
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/haiticuba.htm
AfroCubaWeb
Creole Language and Culture: Part of Cuba's Cultural Patrimony

by Susan Hurlich
Kiba Kreyol 2002
Second Kiba Kreyol Festival
in Havana Ban Rrarra Desandann
Haiti in Cuba
Haiti has a strong presence in Cuba, dating back to the late 1790's after the Haitian revolution, when many French moved to Cuba and took the kidnapped Africans with them. From this wave we get the Tumba Francesa and the Haitian roots music in Cuba. Haitian tradition contains a strong strain of Dahomey and Congo, both of which are present in Cuba. Haitian Rada is Cuban Arara, the Dahomey tradition. More recently, Cuba is perhaps the only country to have welcomed so many Haitians fleeing the persecution of the Generals and their savage regime. There are reportedly over 300,000 recent arrivals in Cuba. And Creole, which is still spoken by descendants of the earlier waves, is Cuba's second language, with a Creole radio station in Havana. There are a number of Haitian roots groups playing in Cuba, including Ban Rrarra and Desandann Today, Cuba has several viable Haitian cultural organizations, includin

88. Jamaican Culture Shines At Haiti's Bicentennial Celebrations - JAMAICAOBSERVER.C
Jamaican culture shines at haiti s bicentennial celebrations. Observer ReporterTuesday, January 06, 2004. Bartley band performed to rapturous applause.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20040105T190000-0500_53923_OBS_JAMAICAN
Last updated: document.write('Wednesday, June 9, 2004, 12:17 AM EST');
Jamaican culture shines at Haiti's bicentennial celebrations
Observer Reporter
Tuesday, January 06, 2004
Bartley... band performed to rapturous applause JAMAICA was well represented at the recent ceremonies marking the 200th anniversary of Haitian independence from France, even though the country only sent its non-resident ambassador to Haiti, Peter Black, to January 1 Port-Au-Prince celebrations. The C Sharp band, comprising current and former students of the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts, also attended the ceremonies, which were marred by violence. The Haitian ministry of culture specially invited the group, which reportedly gave stirring renditions of various Jamaican musical forms to a capacity crowd in front of the National Palace. Black... represented Jamaica at Haiti's bicentennial celebrations Fresh from representing the country at Carifesta earlier in 2003, the group played a variety of current hits and folk music alongside bands from Brazil, the Dominican Republic, and a dance group from Benin to "rapturous applause", according to Sydney Bartley, director of culture in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Culture. Bartley accompanied the group to Haiti. The celebrations were, however, marred by clashes between supporters of Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide and government opponents who accused the president of trying to establish a dictatorship and using the bicentennial for his own purposes.

89. NewsHaiti.com - Haiti News
Art, culture Litterature. He nods a quick greeting here and there in the ultratrendyclub, designed to evoke a forsaken gentlemen s club in haiti circa the
http://www.newshaiti.com/index.php?page=11

90. Cuban Doctors Aid Strife-torn Haiti Havana Journal - Culture
culture Section Science Health. Cuban Doctors aid strifetorn haiti.By WILLIAM STEIF Special to The State www.thestate.com
http://havanajournal.com/culture_comments/P1640_0_3_0/
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Cuban Doctors aid strife-torn Haiti
www.thestate.com
Haiti is in a Maryland-sized country of 8.5 million people with fewer than 2,000 physicians total, concentrated mainly in its capital.
In addition, says Gomez, “Our collaboration supports veterinary services. Cuba is training 628 Haitian doctors in Haiti and Cuba. We have a program to combat illiteracy here. We’ve revived the abandoned Haitian sugar industry, and we’re aiding the fishing industry by stocking 7 million fish and hope to reach 15 million a year.”
Gomez says 705 Cubans are working in Haiti. “The cooperation isn’t motivated by ideology or politics. We’re helping the Haitian people who’ve suffered so much in the last 200 years.”

91. Society And Culture - Haiti - Society & Culture Resources
Society and culture haiti. Society culture Resources. Society andculture haiti Society culture Resources. WoW Search
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92. Travel And Culture: Haiti
These are the people of haiti the children with needlethin arms and fat belliesfull of nothing, the mothers with needle-thin arms and fat bellies full of
http://www.teenink.com/Past/2002/June/Travel/Haiti.html
T he streets are rubble, hand-chipped from quarry rock by breaking men, grateful for jobs no matter how laborious. The smell, or stench, rather, is rotten and dusty, a bit salty from the sea. Garbage, chickens and the black tarp roofs of the makeshift huts inhabitants call home along the streets make for an interesting, moving mosaic of the Third World. This is a different realm.
The people here are dark, all of them: dark in their skin color, dark in their future, dark in the soot of work and scavenging for survival hidden under their nails, and dark in the depth of poverty and struggle swimming deep and low in the rich brown of their irises.
Never are they dark in their hope, though. Nor in their smile or in the undying glitter radiating from their laughter-creased eyes.
These are the people of Haiti: the children with needle-thin arms and fat bellies full of nothing, the mothers with needle-thin arms and fat bellies full of starving children, the old, the young, the dying, the ever-hopeful. These are the people of Haiti.
The decision to travel there was spontaneous and instantly seemed to sit well in my soul. It was on the way home from a weekend working at a homeless shelter that going to Haiti was mentioned. Phil, my new youth pastor, was a man of refreshing intensity and the will to push us from the comfort and idleness of ignorance into uncomfortable new growth territory. The trip Phil planned would take him into an orphanage in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. I was anxious to accompany this man I so respected to a world I had never seen.

93. History And Culture In Haiti - Haiti Attractions
history and culture Visit TripAdvisor, your source for the web s best unbiasedreviews and articles about history and culture in haiti, Caribbean.
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g147306-Activities-c1-Haiti.html
Haiti - History and culture
Unbiased reviews of attractions, activites and things to do in Haiti, Caribbean - history and culture You are here: Home Caribbean Haiti Haiti Attractions History and culture
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94. EIAL XIV1 - Taking Haiti: Military Occupation And The Culture Of U.S. Imperialis
ENERO JUNIO 2003. CIENCIA EN AMERICA LATINA. Busca en EIAL MARY A. RENDA TakingHaiti Military Occupation and the culture of US Imperialism 1915-1940.
http://www.tau.ac.il/eial/XIV_1/lundahl.html
E.I.A.L. ESTUDIOS INTERDISCIPLINARIOS DE AMERICA LATINA Y EL CARIBE ARTICULOS EIAL INDICES CONSEJO EDITORIAL ADMINISTRATIVIA ENERO - JUNIO 2003 CIENCIA EN AMERICA LATINA Busca en E.I.A.L.:
MARY A. RENDA: Taking Haiti: Military Occupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism 1915-1940. Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press, 2001. Mary Renda’s book about the United States occupation of Haiti between 1915 and 1934 addresses two different questions: how US culture was used in the justification of the occupation and how military presence in Haiti contributed to the transformation of culture in the US between 1920 and 1940. It is not a history of the occupation, nor does it purport to explain the causes or effects of it, although enough background is provided to make the book accessible to non-specialists on Haiti. For those wanting to learn about Haiti, the most interesting part of the book is the one dealing with the occupation itself. Renda’s analysis enhances our understanding of such conspicuous facts as the use of violence and the racism expressed by the marines when dealing with the local population. The (yet unproven) thesis has sometimes been advanced that a majority of the soldiers in the occupation force are likely to have been Southerners, who “knew” how to deal with blacks. Renda has an alternative explanation: paternalism. Underlying the perceptions and actions of the marines was the belief that Haitians were not capable of forging their own destinies but needed guidance from a more advanced nation.

95. Taking Haiti: Military Occupation And The Culture Of U.S. Imperialism, 1915-1940
As Carl Van Doren predicted in 1929, narratives about haiti and haitian culture tooktheir place in the literature of empire that helped to produce that reality
http://uncpress.unc.edu/chapters/renda_taking.html
440 pp., 61/8 x 91/4, 30 illus., 3 maps, notes, bibl., index $49.95 cloth
ISBN 0-8078-2628-6 $19.95 paper
ISBN 0-8078-4938-3
Published: Spring 2001
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Taking Haiti

Military Occupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism, 1915-1940
by Mary A. Renda
Chapter 1 Introduction
An occupation is, in one sense, a temporary arm of the state created to carry out a series of specific tasks. In this case, those tasks were to bring about political stability in Haiti, to secure U.S. control over Haiti with regard to U.S. strategic interests in the Caribbean, and to integrate Haiti more effectively into the international capitalist economy. Of course, supporters of the occupation, and those responsible for it, proposed that these goals would also bring about specific gains for Haiti. They pointed, for example, to the work of the Navy Medical Corps and to the construction of roads, bridges, buildings, and telephone systems under the marines' supervision.[4] With these changes, U.S. policy makers indeed sought to create an infrastructure to serve as the foundation for economic development and modernization. They also professed the hope that on this basis a new Haitian democracy would flourish. On the ground, cross-cultural dynamics complicated Washington's script for the occupation. Some members of the Haitian elite initially cooperated with the U.S. military, even viewing their presence as potentially helpful, but other Haitians, long suspicious of foreign powers and of government in general, were less eager to play their parts. Many Haitians adopted a watchful stance in relation to the invading

96. The UNC Press, Taking Haiti By Mary A. Renda
Pathbreaking and provocative, Taking haiti illuminates the complex interplaybetween culture and acts of violence in the making of the American empire.
http://uncpress.unc.edu/books/T-4661.html

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440 pp., 61/8 x 91/4, 30 illus., 3 maps, notes, bibl., index $49.95 cloth
ISBN 0-8078-2628-6
$19.95 paper
ISBN 0-8078-4938-3
Published:
Spring/Summer 2001 Add to cart View cart Checkout Taking Haiti Military Occupation and the Culture of U.S. Imperialism, 1915-1940 by Mary A. Renda Awards Winner of the 2002 John Hope Franklin Prize, American Studies Association Winner of the 2002 Stuart L. Bernath Prize, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Winner of the 2002 Albert J. Beveridge Award, American Historical Association The U.S. invasion of Haiti in July 1915 marked the start of a military occupation that lasted for nineteen yearsand fed an American fascination with Haiti that flourished even longer. Exploring the cultural dimensions of U.S. contact with Haiti during the occupation and its aftermath, Mary Renda shows that what Americans thought and wrote about Haiti during those years contributed in crucial and unexpected ways to an emerging culture of U.S. imperialism. At the heart of this emerging culture, Renda argues, was American paternalism, which saw Haitians as wards of the United States. She explores the ways in which diverse Americansincluding activists, intellectuals, artists, missionaries, marines, and politiciansresponded to paternalist constructs, shaping new versions of American culture along the way. Her analysis draws on a rich record of U.S. discourses on Haiti, including the writings of policymakers; the diaries, letters, songs, and memoirs of marines stationed in Haiti; and literary works by such writers as Eugene O'Neill, James Weldon Johnson, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston.

97. Haiti Interface; Culture
The haiti Interface an international multi cultural information site concerninghaiti. culture. Manno Charlemagne Boukman Eksperyans Felix MoriseauLeroy
http://www.desk.nl/~haiti-if/cult/culture.html
CULTURE
Manno Charlemagne Boukman Eksperyans Felix Moriseau-Leroy

98. Uhhp.com:: Haiti Forums: Viewing List Of Forums
Do You have questions regarding haiti? Are you looking for a loved one, or friends? (Edena) 02/11/03 1200 AM. Society culture, Threads, Posts, Last post.
http://forum.uhhp.com/ubbthreads.php?Cat=&C=3

99. SojoNet: Faith, Politics, And Culture
is the Paul Tillich Professor of Theology and culture Emeritus of Union TheologicalSeminary in New York, and has served as chairperson of the haiti Task Force
http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=news.display_archives&mode=current_opinion&

100. Haiti Is Example Of French Cultural Superiority, Says Chirac
More Links. haiti Is Example of French Cultural Superiority, Says Chirac. Andlook at ze wonderful benefits that French culture has given to haiti.
http://www.brokennewz.com/displaystory.asp_Q_storyid_E_782haitifrench
Advertisement - to advertise on Broken Newz starting at $25 a month click here Vote 'Chest' For President 2004 Front Page World In Pictures ... Staff Affiliates Fark BBspot The Specious Report Mentally Incontinent ... More Links Haiti Is Example of French Cultural Superiority, Says Chirac 3/22/2004 - William Grim Paris - Speaking at the annual meeting of the Societe du Hauteur et Snobbishness Gallique, French President Jacques Chirac said yesterday that Haiti is a prime example of French cultural superiority. “Ze Western Hemisphere ees so horrible, but thank goodness zat Haiti remains an oasis of cultural refinement and political stability,” said M. Chirac. “And look at ze wonderful benefits that French culture has given to Haiti. An average life expectancy of 28, a gross domestic product of $1.32, and an advanced health care system that has produced the least overweight population in ze world outside of Zimbabwe. Ze Americans cannot even begin to compare with Haiti.” In related news, Haitian opposition leader Jean-Louis Weedwhacquere of the Alliance Contre Rationalisme, said at a press conference today that if his party is victorious in the next election he will outlaw the use of electricity, which he claims is a symbol of Anglo-Saxon oppression and cultural chauvinism.

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