
New Books in Intellectual History Andrew S. Curran, "Biography of a Dangerous Idea: A New History of Race from Louis XIV to Thomas Jefferson" (Other Press, 2026)
Jan 2, 2026
Andrew S. Curran, a specialist in Enlightenment thought and author of Biography of a Dangerous Idea, dives deep into how pivotal figures like Louis XIV, Kant, and Jefferson shaped our understanding of race. He explores the transition from religious to secular views on humanity and how this shift fueled early racial classifications. Curran highlights the role of literature, like Labat's travelogues, in influencing racial ideas and discusses the contradictions of Enlightenment thinkers, particularly Jefferson’s views on race and liberty. This discussion is both enlightening and provocative, challenging notions of morality in historical context.
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Group Biography Reveals Race's Formation
- Andrew S. Curran frames the book as a biographical group history tracing how Enlightenment figures shaped the modern idea of race.
- He argues these thinkers acted as allegorical types whose ideas cumulatively produced racial thought during the 18th century.
Literacy Fueled Racial Ideas
- Curran links Louis XIV's Code Noir and colonial expansion to a massive rise in literate encounters with enslaved people.
- He claims rising literacy made racist classification spread faster in more "enlightened" societies.
Labat's Travelogue Shaped European Views
- Jean-Baptiste Labat, a Dominican priest, ran a highly profitable Martinique plantation and authored widely read travelogues.
- His New Voyage became a bestseller and influenced writers including Thomas Jefferson.
