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A conversation with Ashley Williard on Engendering Islands: Sexuality, Reproduction, and Violence in the Early French Caribbean, published in 2021 by University of Nebraska Press.
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This discussion is with Dr. Ashley M. Williard, an assistant professor in the Francophone Studies Program at the University of South Carolina, where her research examines disability, gender, and race in the early modern French-speaking world. Her research has appeared in publications including Early Modern Black Diaspora Studies, Early Modern Women, and Esprit Créateur, among others. Her second book project, currently entitled Disruptive Minds: Madness in the Early French Atlantic, examines the ways mediated voices of the “mad” can expose sites of subjectivity that interrogate colonial power structures and archival silences. She was recently awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend for work on this new project. Our conversation here focuses on her first book, entitled Engendering Islands: Sexuality, Reproduction, and Violence in the Early French Caribbean published by University of Nebraska Press in 2021 where she argues how reconstructions of masculinity and femininity upheld slavery and nascent ideas of race in the seventeenth-century Antilles.