
New Books in History Andrew S. Curran, "Biography of a Dangerous Idea: A New History of Race from Louis XIV to Thomas Jefferson" (Other Press, 2026)
Jan 8, 2026
Join Andrew S. Curran, a William Armstrong Professor of the Humanities at Wesleyan University, as he explores how Enlightenment thinkers influenced the concept of race. He discusses pivotal figures like Louis XIV and Jefferson, revealing the intertwining of Enlightenment ideals with systems of oppression. Curran examines how taxonomy transformed human classifications and highlights counterarguments from thinkers like Diderot. The conversation unpacks the moral complexities of these historical figures, making it both enlightening and thought-provoking.
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Group Biography Reveals Race's Formation
- Curran frames the book as a biographical group history tracing how Enlightenment figures shaped modern race thinking.
- He argues distinct intellectual tendencies cumulatively produced the modern concept of race rather than a single conspiratorial origin.
Literacy Amplified Racial Ideas
- Curran links Louis XIV's Code Noir and rising literacy to a surge in documented contact with enslaved people.
- He argues expanded literacy disseminated emergent racist classifications beyond elite scientific circles.
Labat's Travelogues Reached Jefferson
- Jean-Baptiste Labat ran a highly profitable Martinique plantation and wrote widely read travelogues used across Europe.
- Curran notes Thomas Jefferson owned Labat's New Voyage, showing its broad intellectual reach.


