This is an important contribution to an important topic. But it is also a model of how intellectual history should be done. Curran moves well beyond the parade of Big Thinkers that have long dominated the history of ideas. He reads them, to be sure, but he also reads what they read. By this technique, he moves deeper and deeper into the culture of ethnography, anatomy, and slavery in search of the origins and forms of 'Blackness.'
--Marshall Poe, New Books in History
Curran's approach to intellectual history is an exciting one that transcends the oft-written biographies and other author-centered discussions. His focus on trends and his immersion in the writings of the time creates an accurate rather than anachronistic mindset, which is truly useful for historians.
--Sarah Goodwin, Alpata: A Journal of History
A definitive statement on the complex, painful, and richly revealing topic of how the major figures of the French Enlightenment reacted to the enslavement of black Africans, often to their discredit. The fields of race studies and of Enlightenment studies are more than ready to embrace the type of analysis in which Curran engages, and all the more so in that his book is beautifully written and illustrated.
--Mary McAlpin, Symposium
A highly intelligent book on an important topic. The breadth of Andrew Curran's knowledge about the Enlightenment is astonishing . . . The book makes the convincing point not only that Africa is a major focus in the Enlightenment's imagination, but also that natural history and anthropology are central to understanding not only its scientific agenda, but also its humanitarian politics.
--Carl Niekerk, Centaurus
Curran's Francotropism and medical background enable him to develop insights that should prove important to the ongoing transnationalization and discipline-blurring of literary and cultural studies.
--Ian Finseth, Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment
This study reveals with striking clarity the complex interaction of the science of human difference in this period with other strands of Enlightenment thought as well as the practices of (French) slave trading and colonial slavery.
--Carolyn Vellenga Berman, H-France
A major contribution to the study of the uses of natural history, the presence and absence of universalism in the Enlightenment, and the origins of modern racial thought.
--Martin S. Staum, H-France
Curran has produced a powerful argument about how Europeans defined not only Africans but themselves in the early modern period; about how depictions of the 'other' furnished slavers and planters with the necessary intellectual justifications for slavery; about how natural science has the (frightening) ability to define both body and soul.
--Jeremy L. Caradonna, H-France
The Anatomy of Blackness is an intense and challenging reading experience, but one that certainly repays the effort.
--Stephen Kenny, Reviews in History
This is a convincing piece of scholarship. . . a satisfying and clear analysis of how French writers (among other) constructed images of the African body that reflected, while often simultaneously silencing, the central role played by slavery in attracting European interest to the subject in the first place. . . This book will be read with interest and profit not only by scholars of the Enlightenment, but also those concerned with the history of racial thinking, slavery, the history of science, and Europe's engagement with the rest of the world.
--Rebecca Earle, European History Quarterly
This engrossing, comprehensive study traces 18th-century European thought on anatomical blackness of Africans . . . Curran's ability to dissect and explain complicated arguments of the period's major thinkers is impressive.
--Choice
The rise of racial science in the late eighteenth century has become a flourishing field of investigation over the past twenty or so years. Andrew S. Curran's The Anatomy of Blackness is a significant contribution to this scholarship. . . In trying to understand why these events unfolded so differently in each nation, Andrew Curran's study has greatly enlarged our knowledge of an emergent race science in "enlightened" France.
--Nicholas Hudson, Bulletin of the History of Medicine
The most comprehensive analysis of Enlightenment science of race since Michele Duchet's Anthropologie et histoire au siècle des Lumières. Curran's careful attention to the emerging sciences of dermal anatomy and albinism highlight tensions between environmentalist and essential explanations of racial difference in a wide range of canonical and understudied eighteenth-century texts, within the wider contexts of European colonialism, slavery, and abolitionism.
--Sue Peabody, author of "There Are No Slaves in France" The Political Culture of Race and Slavery in the Ancien Régime