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Revolutions North of the Border: Independence, Rebellion, and Nation Building MTA
Comparative Studies of the American, Haitian, Mexican, and Canadian Transformations
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Revolutions North of the Border: Independence, Rebellion, and Nation Building *Revolutions North of the Border* provides a comparative analysis of the transformative upheavals in the United States, Haiti, Mexico, and the Canadas from the late eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries. The book argues that while these movements emerged from a shared Atlantic crucible of imperial crisis, fiscal extraction, and Enlightenment thought, they produced strikingly different national trajectories. By examining geographies, economies, and social orders, the text highlights how the physical landscape and imperial networks facilitated the circulation of revolutionary rhetoric, soldiers, and refugees, while local contingencies determined whether these crises resulted in violent rupture or negotiated reform.

The narrative details the distinct paths taken by each region: the United States established a settler republic that married natural rights to racial exclusion and territorial expansion; Haiti executed a radical enslaved-led revolution that achieved both independence and universal emancipation; Mexico navigated a protracted struggle between insurgent social reform and conservative elite compromise; and the Canadas followed a slower, constitutional route. Central to these stories are the roles of Indigenous nations, whose sovereignty remained a persistent factor in borderland politics, and the unacknowledged labor of women in sustaining households and revolutionary efforts. The book emphasizes that the definition of "revolution" varied, ranging from the total social reordering of Haiti to the "responsible government" achieved in the Canadas.

A significant portion of the work is dedicated to the cross-cutting themes of race, religion, and diplomacy. It explores how the paradox of liberty and slavery was handled across the continent, from the entrenchment of bondage in the American South to its abolition in the British Empire and Mexico. Religious institutions are depicted as both pillars of the old order and engines of change, providing the political theology that legitimized various movements. Furthermore, the text analyzes the international consequences of these upheavals, showing how foreign intervention and global trade rivalries influenced the survival and sovereignty of the nascent North American nations.

The final section examines the long-term legacies of these events, focusing on how memory and myth were used to construct national identities. Each state curated its own history to justify new political orders—whether through the "founding father" myths of the United States, the "peaceable kingdom" narrative of Canada, or the populist recasting of the Mexican insurgency. Ultimately, the book concludes that the North American revolutions were not isolated events but intertwined processes that permanently redefined citizenship and sovereignty across the continent, leaving behind contested principles that continue to shape political life.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Comparative analysis of the American, Haitian, Mexican, and Canadian revolutionary moments as interconnected events emerging from a shared Atlantic crisis rather than isolated national stories
  • Examination of how conceptions of citizenship, race, and sovereignty were imagined, contested, and institutionalized from the late eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries across different revolutionary contexts
  • The Haitian Revolution as the most radical event of the era - an enslaved majority overthrowing slavery and colonial rule to declare independence and assert Black sovereignty, challenging global racial hierarchies
  • Distinct national trajectories: US republican project expanding while entrenching racial exclusions, Haiti's universal emancipation anchoring a new polity, Mexico's corporate traditions intertwining with republican ideals, and Canada's constitutional reform preserving imperial ties through responsible government
  • Focus on ordinary people's roles in making and sometimes unmaking revolutions, showing how households, villages, plantations, and parishes participated in these transformations beyond elite actors
Who's It For:

This book is designed for students and scholars of Atlantic history, American history, Latin American history, and Caribbean studies, particularly those interested in comparative revolutions, citizenship, race, and nation-building. It will be valuable for graduate students working on transnational or comparative projects and educators teaching courses on the Age of Revolutions or comparative colonialism. Researchers examining how imperial crises produced divergent national outcomes through the lenses of geography, migration, popular participation, and the interplay between local and global forces will find this work especially relevant for understanding the complex legacies of revolutionary change in North America.

Author:

Arthur Fox

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 19, 2026

Word Count:

68,829 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 49 minutes

Sample:

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