View of a street in Faubourg Ste. Marie, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1821. Historic New Orleans Collection, L. Kemper and Leila Moore Williams Founders Collection, 1937.2.3. Banner for 2026 Stanley J. Stein Lecture vertical bar Rebecca Scott: A Pretense of Ownership: The Attempted Enslavement of Rose Bazile ( Port-au-Prince, Santiago de Cuba, New Orleans )

2026 Stanley J. Stein Lecture | Rebecca Scott: A Pretense of Ownership: The Attempted Enslavement of Rose Bazile (Port-au-Prince, Santiago de Cuba, New Orleans)

by Program in Latin American Studies

Lecture

Tue, Mar 17, 2026

5 PM – 6:30 PM EDT (GMT-4)

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Aaron Burr Hall, Room 219 (open to the public)

Princeton, NJ 08544, United States

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Almost a decade after the Haitian Revolution led to the abolition of slavery in the French colony of Saint-Domingue, Napoleon Bonaparte sent an expeditionary force to try to crush the Revolution and reverse emancipation. Though he failed on both counts, the destruction his assault unleashed turned thousands into refugees. Among those who fled in 1803 were a man born in southern France named Pierre Bazy, an African-born woman named Gertrude, and Gertrude’s child named Rose.

Upon arrival in Cuba and later in Louisiana, Pierre claimed to own Rose, and thus to control her labor, her behavior, and access to her body. Rose nonetheless found ways to live according to her own contrary claim to free status, and to document that freedom. Enraged, Pierre reported her to the New Orleans police as marronne (a runaway from slavery), leading to her arrest and jailing. Soon judges, lawyers, and dozens of witnesses had to address in court variants of the question: What is evidence of ownership, and what is evidence of freedom? Or, as we might put it: What could keep the legal fiction of property in a person afloat, and what might sink it?

ABOUT OUR GUEST SPEAKER

Rebecca J. Scott
 (PhD Princeton 1982) is the Charles Gibson Distinguished University Professor of History and Professor of Law at the University of Michigan, emerita. The author of Slave Emancipation in Cuba (1985) and Degrees of Freedom: Louisiana and Cuba after Slavery (2005), she is currently completing a book titled “No Safe Harbor: Three Women between Freedom and Enslavement.” With Jean Hébrard she co-authored Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation (2012), which traces five generations of a family from West Africa to the Caribbean and beyond. A French edition will appear from Éditions Gallimard in April, 2026. She has received a MacArthur Prize Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

This event is co-organized with the Brazil LAB.
 



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Where

Aaron Burr Hall, Room 219 (open to the public)

Princeton, NJ 08544, United States

Speakers

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Rebecca Scott

University of Michigan

Rebecca J. Scott (PhD Princeton 1982) is the Charles Gibson Distinguished University Professor of History and Professor of Law at the University of Michigan, emerita. The author of Slave Emancipation in Cuba (1985) and Degrees of Freedom: Louisiana and Cuba after Slavery (2005), she is currently completing a book titled “No Safe Harbor: Three Women between Freedom and Enslavement.” With Jean Hébrard she co-authored Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation (2012), which traces five generations of a family from West Africa to the Caribbean and beyond. A French edition will appear from Éditions Gallimard in April, 2026. She has received a MacArthur Prize Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.


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Co-hosted with: Princeton Institute for International & Regional Studies

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