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Cuba’s Largest Inheritance. Bohemia
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
I Indigenous Society and Conquest
- Christopher Columbus ‘‘Discovers’’ Cuba 7
- The Devastation of the Indies 12
- Spanish Officials and Indigenous Resistance. Various Spanish Officials 15
- A World Destroyed 20
- ‘‘Transculturation’’ and Cuba 26
- Survival Stories 28
-
II Sugar, Slavery, and Colonialism
- A Physician’s Notes on Cuba 37
- The Death of the Forest 44
- Autobiography of a Slave 49
- Biography of a Runaway Slave 58
- Fleeing Slavery 65
- Santiago de Cuba’s Fugitive Slaves 69
- Rumba 74
- The Trade in Chinese Laborers 79
- Life on a Coffee Plantation 83
- Cuba’s First Railroad 88
- The Color Line 91
- Abolition! 94
- Cecilia Valdés 97
- Sab 103
- An Afro-Cuban Poet 110
-
III The Struggle for Independence
- Freedom and Slavery 115
- Memories of a Cuban Girl 118
- José Martí’s ‘‘Our America’’ 122
- Guantanamera 128
- The Explosion of the Maine. New York Journal 130
- U.S. Cartoonists Portray Cuba 135
- The Devastation of Counterinsurgency. Fifty-fifth Congress, Second Session 139
-
IV Neocolonialism
- The Platt Amendment 147
- Imperialism and Sanitation 150
- A Child of the Platt Amendment 154
- Spain in Cuba 157
- The Independent Party of Color. El Partido Independiente de Color 163
- A Survivor 167
- Rachel’s Song 171
- Honest Women 180
- Generals and Doctors 186
- A Crucial Decade 189
- Afrocubanismo and Son 192
- Drums in My Eyes 201
- Abakuá 212
- The First Wave of Cuban Feminism 219
- Life at the Mill 226
- Migrant Workers in the Sugar Industry 234
- The Cuban Counterpoint 239
- The Invasion of the Tourists 244
- Waiting Tables in Havana 253
- The Brothel of the Caribbean 257
- A Prostitute Remembers 260
- Sugarcane 264
- Where Is Cuba Headed? 265
- The Chase 270
- The Fall of Machado 274
- Sugar Mills and Soviets 281
- The United States Confronts the 1933 Revolution 283
- The Political Gangster 287
- The United Fruit Company in Cuba 290
- Cuba’s Largest Inheritance. Bohemia 296
- The Last Call 298
- For Us, It Is Always the 26th of July 300
- Three Comandantes Talk It Over 302
- History Will Absolve Me 306
- Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War 315
- The United States Rules Cuba, 1952–1958 321
- The Cuban Story in the New York Times 326
-
V Building a New Society
- And Then Fidel Arrived 333
- Tornado 340
- Castro Announces the Revolution 341
- How the Poor Got More 344
- Fish à la Grande Jardinière 354
- Women in the Swamps 363
- Man and Socialism 370
- In the Fist of the Revolution 375
- The Agrarian Revolution 378
- 1961: The Year of Education 386
- The Literacy Campaign 389
- The ‘‘Rehabilitation’’ of Prostitutes 395
- The Family Code 399
- Homosexuality, Creativity, Dissidence 406
- The Original Sin 412
- Where the Island Sleeps Like a Wing 414
- Silence on Black Cuba 419
- Black Man in Red Cuba 424
- Post-modern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque 427
- From Utopianism to Institutionalization 433
- Carlos Puebla Sings about the Economy 443
-
VI Culture and Revolution
- Caliban 449
- For an Imperfect Cinema 458
- Dance and Social Change 466
- Revolutionary Sport 475
- Mea Cuba 481
- In Hard Times 488
- The Virgin of Charity of Cobre, Cuba’s Patron Saint 490
- A Conversation on Santería and Palo Monte 498
- The Catholic Church and the Revolution 505
- Havana’s Jewish Community 509
-
VII The Cuban Revolution and the World
- The Venceremos Brigades 515
- The Cuban Revolution and the New Left 526
- The U.S. Government Responds to Revolution. Foreign Relations of the United States 530
- Castro Calls on Cubans to Resist the Counterrevolution 536
- Operation Mongoose 540
- Offensive Missiles on That Imprisoned Island 544
- Inconsolable Memories: A Cuban View of the Missile Crisis 547
- The Assassination Plots Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities 552
- Cuban Refugee Children 557
- From Welcomed Exiles to Illegal Immigrants 561
- Wrong Channel 566
- We Came All the Way from Cuba So You Could Dress Like This? 568
- City on the Edge 581
- Singing for Nicaragua 588
- Cuban Medical Diplomacy 590
-
VIII The ‘‘Período Especial’’ and the Future of the Revolution
- Silvio Rodríguez Sings of the Special Period 595
- From Communist Solidarity to Communist Solitary 607
- The Revolution Turns Forty 623
- Colonizing the Cuban Body 628
- Pope John Paul II Speaks in Cuba 635
- Emigration in the Special Period 637
- The Old Man and the Boy 644
- Civil Society 650
- Forty Years Later 660
- A Dissident Speaks Out 664
- One More Assassination Plot 666
- An Errand in Havana 671
- No Turning Back for Johnny 678
- Suggestions for Further Reading 691
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights 701
- Index 713
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
I Indigenous Society and Conquest
- Christopher Columbus ‘‘Discovers’’ Cuba 7
- The Devastation of the Indies 12
- Spanish Officials and Indigenous Resistance. Various Spanish Officials 15
- A World Destroyed 20
- ‘‘Transculturation’’ and Cuba 26
- Survival Stories 28
-
II Sugar, Slavery, and Colonialism
- A Physician’s Notes on Cuba 37
- The Death of the Forest 44
- Autobiography of a Slave 49
- Biography of a Runaway Slave 58
- Fleeing Slavery 65
- Santiago de Cuba’s Fugitive Slaves 69
- Rumba 74
- The Trade in Chinese Laborers 79
- Life on a Coffee Plantation 83
- Cuba’s First Railroad 88
- The Color Line 91
- Abolition! 94
- Cecilia Valdés 97
- Sab 103
- An Afro-Cuban Poet 110
-
III The Struggle for Independence
- Freedom and Slavery 115
- Memories of a Cuban Girl 118
- José Martí’s ‘‘Our America’’ 122
- Guantanamera 128
- The Explosion of the Maine. New York Journal 130
- U.S. Cartoonists Portray Cuba 135
- The Devastation of Counterinsurgency. Fifty-fifth Congress, Second Session 139
-
IV Neocolonialism
- The Platt Amendment 147
- Imperialism and Sanitation 150
- A Child of the Platt Amendment 154
- Spain in Cuba 157
- The Independent Party of Color. El Partido Independiente de Color 163
- A Survivor 167
- Rachel’s Song 171
- Honest Women 180
- Generals and Doctors 186
- A Crucial Decade 189
- Afrocubanismo and Son 192
- Drums in My Eyes 201
- Abakuá 212
- The First Wave of Cuban Feminism 219
- Life at the Mill 226
- Migrant Workers in the Sugar Industry 234
- The Cuban Counterpoint 239
- The Invasion of the Tourists 244
- Waiting Tables in Havana 253
- The Brothel of the Caribbean 257
- A Prostitute Remembers 260
- Sugarcane 264
- Where Is Cuba Headed? 265
- The Chase 270
- The Fall of Machado 274
- Sugar Mills and Soviets 281
- The United States Confronts the 1933 Revolution 283
- The Political Gangster 287
- The United Fruit Company in Cuba 290
- Cuba’s Largest Inheritance. Bohemia 296
- The Last Call 298
- For Us, It Is Always the 26th of July 300
- Three Comandantes Talk It Over 302
- History Will Absolve Me 306
- Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War 315
- The United States Rules Cuba, 1952–1958 321
- The Cuban Story in the New York Times 326
-
V Building a New Society
- And Then Fidel Arrived 333
- Tornado 340
- Castro Announces the Revolution 341
- How the Poor Got More 344
- Fish à la Grande Jardinière 354
- Women in the Swamps 363
- Man and Socialism 370
- In the Fist of the Revolution 375
- The Agrarian Revolution 378
- 1961: The Year of Education 386
- The Literacy Campaign 389
- The ‘‘Rehabilitation’’ of Prostitutes 395
- The Family Code 399
- Homosexuality, Creativity, Dissidence 406
- The Original Sin 412
- Where the Island Sleeps Like a Wing 414
- Silence on Black Cuba 419
- Black Man in Red Cuba 424
- Post-modern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque 427
- From Utopianism to Institutionalization 433
- Carlos Puebla Sings about the Economy 443
-
VI Culture and Revolution
- Caliban 449
- For an Imperfect Cinema 458
- Dance and Social Change 466
- Revolutionary Sport 475
- Mea Cuba 481
- In Hard Times 488
- The Virgin of Charity of Cobre, Cuba’s Patron Saint 490
- A Conversation on Santería and Palo Monte 498
- The Catholic Church and the Revolution 505
- Havana’s Jewish Community 509
-
VII The Cuban Revolution and the World
- The Venceremos Brigades 515
- The Cuban Revolution and the New Left 526
- The U.S. Government Responds to Revolution. Foreign Relations of the United States 530
- Castro Calls on Cubans to Resist the Counterrevolution 536
- Operation Mongoose 540
- Offensive Missiles on That Imprisoned Island 544
- Inconsolable Memories: A Cuban View of the Missile Crisis 547
- The Assassination Plots Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities 552
- Cuban Refugee Children 557
- From Welcomed Exiles to Illegal Immigrants 561
- Wrong Channel 566
- We Came All the Way from Cuba So You Could Dress Like This? 568
- City on the Edge 581
- Singing for Nicaragua 588
- Cuban Medical Diplomacy 590
-
VIII The ‘‘Período Especial’’ and the Future of the Revolution
- Silvio Rodríguez Sings of the Special Period 595
- From Communist Solidarity to Communist Solitary 607
- The Revolution Turns Forty 623
- Colonizing the Cuban Body 628
- Pope John Paul II Speaks in Cuba 635
- Emigration in the Special Period 637
- The Old Man and the Boy 644
- Civil Society 650
- Forty Years Later 660
- A Dissident Speaks Out 664
- One More Assassination Plot 666
- An Errand in Havana 671
- No Turning Back for Johnny 678
- Suggestions for Further Reading 691
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights 701
- Index 713