Andrea Stuart
Appearance
Andrea Stuart (born 1962) is a Barbadian British historian and writer, who was raised in the Caribbean and the UK and now lives in the UK. Her biography of Josephine Bonaparte, entitled The Rose of Martinique, won the Enid McLeod Literary Prize in 2004.
Quotes
[edit]- I wanted to take slavery out of its niche.
- It’s not a black story, it’s not a white story. I want to remind people that this story belongs to us all.
- The reality is that most blacks have mixed blood.
- When I was doing research on George Ashby, I felt some empathy. There’s something brave about leaving the world you know. If you can make that empathetic journey, you can show a more complicated picture.
- I’ve always been interested in the epic story of how sugar, slavery and settlement shaped individual lives. I just had to find a way to tell it.
- The Original Slave Colony: Barbados and Andrea Stuart’s ‘Sugar in the Blood’ Retrieved 2 April 2025
- I kept thinking this book tells a story that Britain does not want to remember.
- With the book, what I didn't want was for my conclusion to be about blame. I wanted it to be about acknowledgement and remembering, because those were the things that came out of it for me. And the fact is, we hold in ourselves so many histories. Normally so much of the narrative around race is to try to make people feel bad, rather than to make them do better. And actually, I'd just prefer them to do better.
- Andrea Stuart doesn't sugar the pill about slavery's role Retrieved 2 April 2025
