A History of the Cuban RevolutionJohn Wiley & Sons, 2010 M11 23 - 256 páginas A History of the Cuban Revolution presents a concise socio-historical account of the Cuban Revolution of 1959, an event that continues to spark debate 50 years later.
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Dentro del libro
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Página 5
... early on: “Scholarship must never become a clandestine arm of U.S. policy.”15 New scholars trained in Latin American Studies who spent time working in Latin America as often as not turned into opponents of U.S. policy towards the region ...
... early on: “Scholarship must never become a clandestine arm of U.S. policy.”15 New scholars trained in Latin American Studies who spent time working in Latin America as often as not turned into opponents of U.S. policy towards the region ...
Página 7
... early twentieth centuries, American anti-colonial revolutions, and Cubans' own attempts from the mid-nineteenth century on to achieve national independence and social change. The global “Age of Revolution” marked by the American and ...
... early twentieth centuries, American anti-colonial revolutions, and Cubans' own attempts from the mid-nineteenth century on to achieve national independence and social change. The global “Age of Revolution” marked by the American and ...
Página 8
... early nineteenth century. Instead, the elites closed ranks with the colonial powers. The example of Haiti soured them not only on social revolution, but on any challenge to the political or social order. It took another 75 years – and ...
... early nineteenth century. Instead, the elites closed ranks with the colonial powers. The example of Haiti soured them not only on social revolution, but on any challenge to the political or social order. It took another 75 years – and ...
Página 20
... early 1800s. Brazil, St. Domingue, Jamaica and Barbados in particular became huge exporters of sugar. The Spanish islands, though, were imperial backwaters until the late 1700s, with smaller populations, and more diversified and ...
... early 1800s. Brazil, St. Domingue, Jamaica and Barbados in particular became huge exporters of sugar. The Spanish islands, though, were imperial backwaters until the late 1700s, with smaller populations, and more diversified and ...
Página 21
... early years of the twentieth century, the United States orchestrated a large influx of migrant workers from U.S. -occupied Haiti to labor on the plantations. Sugar workers also migrated from Jamaica. Refugees came from Europe, including ...
... early years of the twentieth century, the United States orchestrated a large influx of migrant workers from U.S. -occupied Haiti to labor on the plantations. Sugar workers also migrated from Jamaica. Refugees came from Europe, including ...
Contenido
1 | |
18 | |
Experiments with Socialism | 44 |
Relations with the United States | 65 |
Emigration and Internationalism | 91 |
Art Culture and Revolution | 106 |
Cuba Diversa | 134 |
Socialism on One Island | 153 |
Cuba into the TwentyFirst Century | 176 |
Conclusion | 193 |
Bibliography | 214 |
Index | 228 |
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