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Rethinking the Cuban Revolution Nationally and Regionally: Politics, Culture and Identity

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ISBN: 978-1-444-36154-4

March 2012

Wiley-Blackwell

188 pages

Description
Rethinking the Cuban Revolution offers new perspectives on the political and cultural life of the Cuban Revolution based on inter-disciplinary methods. Contributions reassess the national survival of the Revolution, and propose new approaches to cultural and political identity in Cuba.
  • Presents original research data based on contemporary fieldwork and archival research, which rethinks the political and cultural life of the Cuban Revolution
  • Innovative approaches question the assumption that Cuban revolutionary policy and practice function according to top-down structure
  • Combines an indispensable understanding of the importance of nation in the Cuban context with an awareness of regional or transnational actors and patterns
  • Reassesses the national survival of the Revolution beyond the Special Period, and propose new approaches to cultural and political identity in Cuba
About the Author
Par Kumaraswami is a Lecturer in Latin American Cultural Studies and Co-Director of the Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Manchester. She has published extensively on Cuban cultural policy and practice, including a forthcoming co-authored monograph on literary culture and the Cuban Revolution. She is co-editor of Making Waves: Anniversary Volume: Women in Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American Studies (with Ann Davies and Claire Williams, 2008) and Revolucionarias: Conflict and Gender in Latin American Narratives by Women (with Niamh Thornton, 2007).