Reinhardts astute, well researched, and historically contextualized literary analyses yield much interesting commentary as well as some original insights. American Historical Review
Claims to Memory is illuminating, thought-provoking, and even elegant. All students and scholars with an interest in Frances islands in the Caribbean need to read it. Island Studies Journal
Claims to Memory is an engaging and in many ways unique bookthat sets out to dismantle the delusions of republican France as the birthplace of liberty and slave emancipation Reinhardts book is a great challenge to francophone literary studies and a brilliant response to Glissant's call for a 'prophetic vision of the past.' H-France Review
The complexities and controversies of commemorating slavery provide Claims to Memory with a fascinating subject matter a valuable addition to debates on slavery commemoration that serves as a counterpoint to the overpowering narrative of the French abolitionist movement. Francophone Studies
Reinhardt does not fail in her ambitions. Using the theoretical antecedent of rhizomatic memory and reading across the multiple sources this method entails, Reinhardt succeeds in challenging our simplification of historical narratives of abolition in the Caribbean, and our assumptions about the interrelationship between abolition and the Enlightenment In her reading across genres and realms of memory, this text offers an excellent actualization of rhizome memory [ and] an historical account of slavery in the French Caribbean from a variety of sources ideal for scholars in the area of the history of slavery. Claims to Memory is also engaging reading for scholars in the more general areas of public memory and representation. The Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie
What is distinctive about Catherine Reinhardt's book is the highly visible place that it gives to the decolonizing of memory in a larger theory of Caribbean postcolonial subjectivity. This makes it a vital contribution to the theory of the postcolonial subject. Paget Henry, the Fanon Prize Committee, Caribbean Philosophical Association