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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Página 20
... sugar. The Spanish islands, though, were imperial backwaters until the late 1700s, with smaller populations, and more diversified and subsistence production. The big influx of African slaves in Cuba, and the sugar export economy ...
... sugar. The Spanish islands, though, were imperial backwaters until the late 1700s, with smaller populations, and more diversified and subsistence production. The big influx of African slaves in Cuba, and the sugar export economy ...
Página 21
... sugar in the late nineteenth century. In the 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 ...
... sugar in the late nineteenth century. In the 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 ...
Página 22
... sugar plantocracy. Still, the relationship of anti-black racism to nationalism, and the relationships of blacks to the independence movement and ideology, were very different in Cuba from in the United States. After 1902, nationalist ...
... sugar plantocracy. Still, the relationship of anti-black racism to nationalism, and the relationships of blacks to the independence movement and ideology, were very different in Cuba from in the United States. After 1902, nationalist ...
Página 26
... sugar boom displaced small farmers and provided meager wages. Rural folk flocked to the cities in search of jobs and a better life, but urban infrastructure served the wealthy and the small middle classes, not the burgeoning slums. With ...
... sugar boom displaced small farmers and provided meager wages. Rural folk flocked to the cities in search of jobs and a better life, but urban infrastructure served the wealthy and the small middle classes, not the burgeoning slums. With ...
Página 28
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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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Términos y frases comunes
African Afro-Cuban Alleged Assassination Plots argued Aviva Chomsky Batista Bay of Pigs benefit campaign capitalism capitalist Caribbean Carlos Puebla challenge Che Guevara colonial Communist Party conflict country’s created crisis Cuba Cuba’s Cuban American Cuban Economy Cuban government Cuban Revolution cultural defined democracy difficult Dilla dollars early Eckstein economic exile Fagen Feinsilver Fidel Castro figures film first flourished foreign freedom FRUS García global goals government’s Havana historians homosexuality ideas ideology immigrants independence industry influence island José Martí Latin America leaders Mesa-Lago Miami military missiles movement office organizations participation percent Pérez political popular population President profits programs racial inequality Raúl Raúl Castro Rectification Reform and Revolution Revolution’s revolutionary role Santería scholars sector sexual significant social socialist Soviet Special Period sugar Third World tion tourist U.S. Congress U.S. government U.S. officials U.S. policy United urban USSR women workers