Marlene L. Daut, image by Dan Addison

Marlene L. Daut

Professor of French and African Diaspora Studies, Yale University

Marlene Daut teaches courses in anglophone and francophone Caribbean, African American, and French colonial literary and historical studies. Primarily a literary and intellectual historian of the Caribbean, she writes about the history of the Haitian Revolution, literary cultures of the greater Caribbean, and racial politics in global media, especially as appears in film, television, and art.

She has been the recipient of several awards, grants, and fellowships for her contributions to historical and cultural understandings of the Caribbean, notably from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers (NYPL), the Ford Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Haitian Studies Association, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Humanities Center, and the Robert Silvers Foundation. Her biography The First and Last King of Haiti: The Rise and Fall of Henry Christophe (Knopf, 2025) won the 2026 Gilbert Chinard Prize from the Society for French Historical Studies and the 2025 Haitian Studies Association Book Prize, and the book was also a finalist for the 2025 Cundill History Prize and was shortlisted for the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in Biography. Her previous monograph, Awakening the Ashes: An Intellectual History of the Haitian Revolution (UNC Press, 2023), is the co-winner of the 2024 Frederick Douglass Book Prize, awarded by the Gilder Lehrman Center for Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition.

Daut is also a digital humanist and editor. She co-created and co-edits H-Net Commons’ digital platform, H-Haiti; she has curated a website on early Haitian print culture at http://lagazetteroyale.com; and she has also developed an online bibliography of fictions of the Haitian Revolution from 1787 to 1900 at the website http://haitianrevolutionaryfictions.com . In addition, she currently edits the Global Black History and Theory section at Public Books and is series editor of New World Studies at UVA Press.

Photo: © Dan Addison