The widespread implementation of Duvalierism further divided the already embattled nation the struggle between race and class relations further soured it added new layer of fear for Haiti’s already disenfranchised women. This extensive cultural practice of colorism does not escape Marie Vieux- Vieux-Chauvet, either, and through her work she explores the complex and often overlooked interrelation of colorism and misogyny, using her unique tapestry of tragic and ambiguous female characters to reflect the “psychopathy of mixed-race identity in Haiti” (Asibong 147). Though colorist rhetoric, “Duvalier strongly emphasized the color issue, exploiting the fact that in Haiti as in other parts of the Caribbean there has been, since colonial times, a general coincidence between color and class, so that most rich are mulatto and most poor are black” (Nicholls 1239-1240).
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