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The Cuba Reader
This chapter is in the book The Cuba Reader
© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgments xi
  4. Introduction 1
  5. I Indigenous Society and Conquest
  6. Christopher Columbus ‘‘Discovers’’ Cuba 7
  7. The Devastation of the Indies 12
  8. Spanish Officials and Indigenous Resistance. Various Spanish Officials 15
  9. A World Destroyed 20
  10. ‘‘Transculturation’’ and Cuba 26
  11. Survival Stories 28
  12. II Sugar, Slavery, and Colonialism
  13. A Physician’s Notes on Cuba 37
  14. The Death of the Forest 44
  15. Autobiography of a Slave 49
  16. Biography of a Runaway Slave 58
  17. Fleeing Slavery 65
  18. Santiago de Cuba’s Fugitive Slaves 69
  19. Rumba 74
  20. The Trade in Chinese Laborers 79
  21. Life on a Coffee Plantation 83
  22. Cuba’s First Railroad 88
  23. The Color Line 91
  24. Abolition! 94
  25. Cecilia Valdés 97
  26. Sab 103
  27. An Afro-Cuban Poet 110
  28. III The Struggle for Independence
  29. Freedom and Slavery 115
  30. Memories of a Cuban Girl 118
  31. José Martí’s ‘‘Our America’’ 122
  32. Guantanamera 128
  33. The Explosion of the Maine. New York Journal 130
  34. U.S. Cartoonists Portray Cuba 135
  35. The Devastation of Counterinsurgency. Fifty-fifth Congress, Second Session 139
  36. IV Neocolonialism
  37. The Platt Amendment 147
  38. Imperialism and Sanitation 150
  39. A Child of the Platt Amendment 154
  40. Spain in Cuba 157
  41. The Independent Party of Color. El Partido Independiente de Color 163
  42. A Survivor 167
  43. Rachel’s Song 171
  44. Honest Women 180
  45. Generals and Doctors 186
  46. A Crucial Decade 189
  47. Afrocubanismo and Son 192
  48. Drums in My Eyes 201
  49. Abakuá 212
  50. The First Wave of Cuban Feminism 219
  51. Life at the Mill 226
  52. Migrant Workers in the Sugar Industry 234
  53. The Cuban Counterpoint 239
  54. The Invasion of the Tourists 244
  55. Waiting Tables in Havana 253
  56. The Brothel of the Caribbean 257
  57. A Prostitute Remembers 260
  58. Sugarcane 264
  59. Where Is Cuba Headed? 265
  60. The Chase 270
  61. The Fall of Machado 274
  62. Sugar Mills and Soviets 281
  63. The United States Confronts the 1933 Revolution 283
  64. The Political Gangster 287
  65. The United Fruit Company in Cuba 290
  66. Cuba’s Largest Inheritance. Bohemia 296
  67. The Last Call 298
  68. For Us, It Is Always the 26th of July 300
  69. Three Comandantes Talk It Over 302
  70. History Will Absolve Me 306
  71. Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War 315
  72. The United States Rules Cuba, 1952–1958 321
  73. The Cuban Story in the New York Times 326
  74. V Building a New Society
  75. And Then Fidel Arrived 333
  76. Tornado 340
  77. Castro Announces the Revolution 341
  78. How the Poor Got More 344
  79. Fish à la Grande Jardinière 354
  80. Women in the Swamps 363
  81. Man and Socialism 370
  82. In the Fist of the Revolution 375
  83. The Agrarian Revolution 378
  84. 1961: The Year of Education 386
  85. The Literacy Campaign 389
  86. The ‘‘Rehabilitation’’ of Prostitutes 395
  87. The Family Code 399
  88. Homosexuality, Creativity, Dissidence 406
  89. The Original Sin 412
  90. Where the Island Sleeps Like a Wing 414
  91. Silence on Black Cuba 419
  92. Black Man in Red Cuba 424
  93. Post-modern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque 427
  94. From Utopianism to Institutionalization 433
  95. Carlos Puebla Sings about the Economy 443
  96. VI Culture and Revolution
  97. Caliban 449
  98. For an Imperfect Cinema 458
  99. Dance and Social Change 466
  100. Revolutionary Sport 475
  101. Mea Cuba 481
  102. In Hard Times 488
  103. The Virgin of Charity of Cobre, Cuba’s Patron Saint 490
  104. A Conversation on Santería and Palo Monte 498
  105. The Catholic Church and the Revolution 505
  106. Havana’s Jewish Community 509
  107. VII The Cuban Revolution and the World
  108. The Venceremos Brigades 515
  109. The Cuban Revolution and the New Left 526
  110. The U.S. Government Responds to Revolution. Foreign Relations of the United States 530
  111. Castro Calls on Cubans to Resist the Counterrevolution 536
  112. Operation Mongoose 540
  113. Offensive Missiles on That Imprisoned Island 544
  114. Inconsolable Memories: A Cuban View of the Missile Crisis 547
  115. The Assassination Plots Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities 552
  116. Cuban Refugee Children 557
  117. From Welcomed Exiles to Illegal Immigrants 561
  118. Wrong Channel 566
  119. We Came All the Way from Cuba So You Could Dress Like This? 568
  120. City on the Edge 581
  121. Singing for Nicaragua 588
  122. Cuban Medical Diplomacy 590
  123. VIII The ‘‘Período Especial’’ and the Future of the Revolution
  124. Silvio Rodríguez Sings of the Special Period 595
  125. From Communist Solidarity to Communist Solitary 607
  126. The Revolution Turns Forty 623
  127. Colonizing the Cuban Body 628
  128. Pope John Paul II Speaks in Cuba 635
  129. Emigration in the Special Period 637
  130. The Old Man and the Boy 644
  131. Civil Society 650
  132. Forty Years Later 660
  133. A Dissident Speaks Out 664
  134. One More Assassination Plot 666
  135. An Errand in Havana 671
  136. No Turning Back for Johnny 678
  137. Suggestions for Further Reading 691
  138. Acknowledgment of Copyrights 701
  139. Index 713
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