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President Roosevelt Proclaims the Platt Amendment
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction 1
-
I Indigenous Society and Conquest
- Christopher Columbus “Discovers” Cuba 7
- The Devastation of the Indies 12
- Spanish Officials and Indigenous Resistance 15
- A World Destroyed 19
- “Transculturation” and Cuba 25
- Survival Stories 27
-
II Sugar, Slavery, and Colonialism
- A Physician’s Notes on Cuba 37
- The Death of the Forest 44
- Autobiography of a Slave 48
- Biography of a Runaway Slave 57
- Fleeing Slavery 64
- Santiago de Cuba’s Fugitive Slaves 68
- Rumba 73
- The Trade in Chinese Laborers 78
- Life on a Coffee Plantation 81
- Cuba’s First Railroad 86
- The Color Line 89
- Abolition! 92
- Cecilia Valdés 95
- Sab 101
- An Afro-Cuban Poet 108
-
III The Struggle for Independence
- Freedom and Slavery 111
- Memories of a Cuban Girl 115
- José Martí’s “Our America” 119
- Guantanamera 125
- The Explosion of the Maine 127
- U.S. Cartoonists Portray Cuba 132
- The Devastation of Counterinsurgency 136
-
IV Neocolonialism
- Introduction 141
- President Roosevelt Proclaims the Platt Amendment 145
- Imperialism and Sanitation 147
- A Child of the Platt Amendment 151
- Spain in Cuba 154
- The Independent Party of Color 160
- A Survivor 163
- Rachel’s Song 166
- Honest Women 174
- A Crucial Decade 180
- Afrocubanismo and Son 183
- Drums in My Eyes 191
- Abakuá 201
- The First Wave of Cuban Feminism 203
- Life at the Mill 210
- Migrant Workers in the Sugar Industry 217
- The Cuban Counterpoint 222
- The Invasion of the Tourists 227
- Waiting Tables in Havana 236
- The Brothel of the Caribbean 239
- Sugarcane 242
- Where Is Cuba Headed? 243
- The Chase 248
- The Fall of Machado 252
- Sugar Mills and Soviets 259
- The United States Confronts the 1933 Revolution 261
- The Political Gangster 265
- The United Fruit Company in Cuba 268
- Cuba’s Largest Inheritance 273
- The Last Call 276
- Three Comandantes Talk It Over 279
- History Will Absolve Me 283
- Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War 292
- The United States Rules Cuba, 1952–1958 298
- The Cuban Story in the New York Times 303
-
V Building a New Society
- Troubadours of the Revolution 309
- Castro Announces the Revolution 315
- How the Poor Got More 318
- Fish à la Grande Jardinière 327
- Women in the Swamps 336
- Socialism and Man 343
- In the Fist of the Revolution 348
- The Agrarian Revolution 352
- 1961: The Year of Education 360
- The Literacy Campaign 363
- The Family Code 368
- The Original Sin 374
- Where the Island Sleeps Like a Wing 376
- Silence on Black Cuba 380
- Black Man in Red Cuba 385
- Postmodern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque 388
- From Utopianism to Institutionalization 394
-
VI Culture and Revolution
- Caliban 405
- For an Imperfect Cinema 414
- Dance and Social Change 422
- Revolutionary Sport 430
- In Hard Times 435
- The Virgin of Charity of Cobre, Cuba’s Patron Saint 437
- A Conversation on Santería and Palo Monte 444
- The Catholic Church and the Revolution 450
-
VII The Cuban Revolution and the World
- The Venceremos Brigades 453
- The Cuban Revolution and the New Left 463
- The U.S. Government Responds to Revolution 467
- Castro Calls on Cubans to Resist the Counterrevolution 472
- Operation Mongoose 476
- Offensive Missiles on That Imprisoned Island 480
- Inconsolable Memories: A Cuban View of the Missile Crisis 483
- The Assassination Plots 487
- Cuban Refugee Children 492
- From Welcomed Exiles to Illegal Immigrants 496
- Wrong Channel 501
- City on the Edge 503
- Singing for Nicaragua 510
- Cuban Medical Diplomacy 512
-
VIII The Período Especial
- Introduction 517
- Silvio Rodríguez Sings of the Special Period 521
- Zippy Goes to Cuba 525
- “Special Period in Peacetime”: Economic and Labor Reforms 528
- The Revolution Turns Forty 542
- Colonizing the Cuban Body 547
- Pope John Paul II Speaks in Cuba 553
- Elián González and the “Real Cuba” of Miami 555
- Civil Society 563
- Forty Years Later 572
-
IX Cuba after Fidel: Continuities and Transitions
- Introduction 577
-
Economy and Society
- Raúl’s Reforms 581
- Emigration in the Twenty-First Century 591
- Tourism and the Many Faces of Havana’s Chinatown 597
- The Antiracist Debate in Today’s Cuba 604
- Afro-Cuban Activists Fight Racism between Two Fires 607
- Race and Cuban Hip-Hop 615
- The “Pavonato” 622
- Short Stories 627
- His Cigar 630
- Gender, Sexuality, and AIDS 632
- A Theory of Reguetón 639
-
12/17 and U.S.-Cuban Relations
- Spies, Counterspies, and Dissidents 643
- Francis, Obama, and Raúl 651
- Obama and Us 652
- “Visit Cuba before It Changes!” 657
-
Perspectives on Cuba ’s New Realities
- New Cuban Voices 661
- “El Paquete”: Internet in Cuba 667
- A New Film Law 672
- So as Not to Throw Out the Sofa (Editorial Song) 674
- Spyglass 677
- Commentaries on Fidel Castro’s Death 678
- Suggestions for Further Reading 683
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights and Sources 697
- Index 709
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction 1
-
I Indigenous Society and Conquest
- Christopher Columbus “Discovers” Cuba 7
- The Devastation of the Indies 12
- Spanish Officials and Indigenous Resistance 15
- A World Destroyed 19
- “Transculturation” and Cuba 25
- Survival Stories 27
-
II Sugar, Slavery, and Colonialism
- A Physician’s Notes on Cuba 37
- The Death of the Forest 44
- Autobiography of a Slave 48
- Biography of a Runaway Slave 57
- Fleeing Slavery 64
- Santiago de Cuba’s Fugitive Slaves 68
- Rumba 73
- The Trade in Chinese Laborers 78
- Life on a Coffee Plantation 81
- Cuba’s First Railroad 86
- The Color Line 89
- Abolition! 92
- Cecilia Valdés 95
- Sab 101
- An Afro-Cuban Poet 108
-
III The Struggle for Independence
- Freedom and Slavery 111
- Memories of a Cuban Girl 115
- José Martí’s “Our America” 119
- Guantanamera 125
- The Explosion of the Maine 127
- U.S. Cartoonists Portray Cuba 132
- The Devastation of Counterinsurgency 136
-
IV Neocolonialism
- Introduction 141
- President Roosevelt Proclaims the Platt Amendment 145
- Imperialism and Sanitation 147
- A Child of the Platt Amendment 151
- Spain in Cuba 154
- The Independent Party of Color 160
- A Survivor 163
- Rachel’s Song 166
- Honest Women 174
- A Crucial Decade 180
- Afrocubanismo and Son 183
- Drums in My Eyes 191
- Abakuá 201
- The First Wave of Cuban Feminism 203
- Life at the Mill 210
- Migrant Workers in the Sugar Industry 217
- The Cuban Counterpoint 222
- The Invasion of the Tourists 227
- Waiting Tables in Havana 236
- The Brothel of the Caribbean 239
- Sugarcane 242
- Where Is Cuba Headed? 243
- The Chase 248
- The Fall of Machado 252
- Sugar Mills and Soviets 259
- The United States Confronts the 1933 Revolution 261
- The Political Gangster 265
- The United Fruit Company in Cuba 268
- Cuba’s Largest Inheritance 273
- The Last Call 276
- Three Comandantes Talk It Over 279
- History Will Absolve Me 283
- Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War 292
- The United States Rules Cuba, 1952–1958 298
- The Cuban Story in the New York Times 303
-
V Building a New Society
- Troubadours of the Revolution 309
- Castro Announces the Revolution 315
- How the Poor Got More 318
- Fish à la Grande Jardinière 327
- Women in the Swamps 336
- Socialism and Man 343
- In the Fist of the Revolution 348
- The Agrarian Revolution 352
- 1961: The Year of Education 360
- The Literacy Campaign 363
- The Family Code 368
- The Original Sin 374
- Where the Island Sleeps Like a Wing 376
- Silence on Black Cuba 380
- Black Man in Red Cuba 385
- Postmodern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque 388
- From Utopianism to Institutionalization 394
-
VI Culture and Revolution
- Caliban 405
- For an Imperfect Cinema 414
- Dance and Social Change 422
- Revolutionary Sport 430
- In Hard Times 435
- The Virgin of Charity of Cobre, Cuba’s Patron Saint 437
- A Conversation on Santería and Palo Monte 444
- The Catholic Church and the Revolution 450
-
VII The Cuban Revolution and the World
- The Venceremos Brigades 453
- The Cuban Revolution and the New Left 463
- The U.S. Government Responds to Revolution 467
- Castro Calls on Cubans to Resist the Counterrevolution 472
- Operation Mongoose 476
- Offensive Missiles on That Imprisoned Island 480
- Inconsolable Memories: A Cuban View of the Missile Crisis 483
- The Assassination Plots 487
- Cuban Refugee Children 492
- From Welcomed Exiles to Illegal Immigrants 496
- Wrong Channel 501
- City on the Edge 503
- Singing for Nicaragua 510
- Cuban Medical Diplomacy 512
-
VIII The Período Especial
- Introduction 517
- Silvio Rodríguez Sings of the Special Period 521
- Zippy Goes to Cuba 525
- “Special Period in Peacetime”: Economic and Labor Reforms 528
- The Revolution Turns Forty 542
- Colonizing the Cuban Body 547
- Pope John Paul II Speaks in Cuba 553
- Elián González and the “Real Cuba” of Miami 555
- Civil Society 563
- Forty Years Later 572
-
IX Cuba after Fidel: Continuities and Transitions
- Introduction 577
-
Economy and Society
- Raúl’s Reforms 581
- Emigration in the Twenty-First Century 591
- Tourism and the Many Faces of Havana’s Chinatown 597
- The Antiracist Debate in Today’s Cuba 604
- Afro-Cuban Activists Fight Racism between Two Fires 607
- Race and Cuban Hip-Hop 615
- The “Pavonato” 622
- Short Stories 627
- His Cigar 630
- Gender, Sexuality, and AIDS 632
- A Theory of Reguetón 639
-
12/17 and U.S.-Cuban Relations
- Spies, Counterspies, and Dissidents 643
- Francis, Obama, and Raúl 651
- Obama and Us 652
- “Visit Cuba before It Changes!” 657
-
Perspectives on Cuba ’s New Realities
- New Cuban Voices 661
- “El Paquete”: Internet in Cuba 667
- A New Film Law 672
- So as Not to Throw Out the Sofa (Editorial Song) 674
- Spyglass 677
- Commentaries on Fidel Castro’s Death 678
- Suggestions for Further Reading 683
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights and Sources 697
- Index 709