"In the era of Black Lives Matter and the mobilization of Black and Brown people to affirm their identity and belonging in America, Robert Fatton has successfully combined a transnational approach to offer the reader a new perspective on race relations, class and power in America in the twenty-first century."— François Pierre-Louis Jr., co-editor of Immigrant Crossroads: Globalization, Incorporation, and Placemaking in Queens, New York<br /> "In this engaging and lucid work, Fatton brilliantly analyzes and critiques ideologies of national exceptionalism. In the process, he demonstrates the interpretive power of comparison, urging us to re-think the intertwined futures of Haiti and the U.S. by refusing myths and narratives that distort their national histories."— Laurent Dubois, author of Haiti: The Aftershocks of History<br /> "<i>The Guise of Exceptionalism</i> offers tremendous resources for thinking in complex terms about a world in which nationalism persistently takes on more dangerous and destructive expressions."— Perspectives on Politics<br /> "In this extraordinary book,Robert Fatton offers a trenchant comparative analysis of the ideology of exceptionalism as it was deployed in the United States and Haiti to extol the world-shaking revolutions that led to the first two independent nation-states in the New World, in 1776 and 1804, respectively."— New West Indian Guide<br />
Preface and Acknowledgement
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 American Exceptionalism
Chapter 3 Exceptionalism and "Unthinkability"
Chapter 4 Manifest Destiny and the American Occupation of Haiti
Chapter 5 The American Occupation and Haiti's Exceptionalism
Chapter 6 Imperial Exceptionalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Chapter 7 Dictatorship, Democratization, And Exceptionalism
Chapter 8 The Diaspora and the Transmogrification of Exceptionalism
Chapter 9 Identity Politics and Modern Exceptionalism
Chapter 10 Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index