Marie Delphine Macarty LaLaurie: Horror, Myth, and Infamy in New Orleans - Couverture souple

Benoit, Gavin

 
9798257797231: Marie Delphine Macarty LaLaurie: Horror, Myth, and Infamy in New Orleans

Synopsis

The fall of a respected household in New Orleans began with a discovery that could not be contained.

The home of Marie Delphine Macarty LaLaurie had long reflected the expectations of status and order that defined the city’s social elite. What was revealed inside, however, could not be reconciled with that image. The reaction was immediate, and the story spread quickly, but what followed did not bring clear resolution.

In Marie Delphine Macarty LaLaurie: Horror, Myth, and Infamy in New Orleans, historian Gavin Benoit moves beyond legend to examine the documented history behind one of the city’s most enduring cases. Drawing on contemporary accounts and the broader context of urban slavery, this book reconstructs what can be supported by evidence while separating it from the layers of interpretation that developed over time.

The LaLaurie case is presented not as a story shaped by myth, but as one grounded in the conditions that made it possible. It reveals a system in which private authority operated with limited oversight, a moment of exposure that brought those conditions into view, and a public response that produced outrage without securing full accountability. As the narrative moves beyond the immediate events, it follows how the story expanded through retelling, becoming part of the city’s cultural memory while growing increasingly distant from its original sources.

What remains is a history that is both clear and incomplete, defined as much by what can be established as by what cannot. The significance of the story lies not in what has been added to it over time, but in what was revealed when the boundaries between public appearance and private reality could no longer be maintained.

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