29 research outputs found

    Black British subjects in Cuba: race, ethnicity, nation, and identity in the migratory experience, 1898-1938

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    This thesis examines the history of black British Caribbean migrants in Cuba during the early twentieth century. It centres on their experience of social and racial discrimination within Cuban society, and how this was influenced by the historical legacy of black fear in Cuba and the social, political, and economic changes the country experienced from 1898 to 1938 (i.e., foreign intervention, social and political revolts, and economic depressions). The racial, ethnic, and identity dynamics in the interaction between the migrants, Cuban society, and the consular representatives are examined in detail. The study avoids the generalisations that are prevalent in the historiography, and contributes with new insights into the history of this migration through its emphasis on different migration patterns, the experiences of the various islanders, and the complex identity politics and social practices of resistance, adjustment, and accommodation in which the migrants were involved The thesis looks at the triangular relation between the black British Antilleans, Cuban society, and the representatives of the British Empire at various levels, and reveals the otherwise unacknowledged agency of the migrants in gaining consular support. The complex debates on race, ethnicity, identity, and nation arising from this case study are of prime relevance not only for the understanding of migration processes in Caribbean societies, but also for the study of nation formation in Cuban society and British colonial and imperial history, At the same time, these debates are connected to wider issues concerning the relationship between race and nation, and racism and migration in the Caribbean past and present. The study is of an interdisciplinary nature and combines archival and documentary research with interviews, ethnographic data, and anthropological and sociological literature

    LIBERDAD, RAZA E NACIÓN EM CUBA: llenando espacios, rompiendo silencios y tocando los sentidos de la historiografia

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    Resumen Este trabajo es un ensayo crítico del texto Espacios, silêncios y sentidos de la libertad: Cuba entre 1878 y 1912, editado por Fernando Martínez Heredia, Rebecca J. Scott, y Orlando García Martínez. En el mismo se destaca la contribución del texto y los debates principales que son detonados por el mismo. De igual forma, se esgrimen unas críticas al texto y a las argumentaciones de los ensayos que lo forman. De esta forma, el ensayo pretende puntualizar algunos de los principales debates en los estúdios e investigaciones sobre la esclavitud, la libertad, la formación nacional, y las relaciones raciales en Cuba, al igual que otros debates de mayor envergadura dentro de los estudios históricos latinoamericanos. Palabras clave: Cuba. Historiografia. Relaciones racialesAbstract This is a critical essay on Espaciones, silêncios y sentidos de la libertad: Cuba entre 1878 y 1912, edited by Fernando Martínez Heredia, Rebecca J. Scott, y Orlando García Martínez. It highlights the contributions of the book and the principal debates that are triggered by it. Accordingly, the essay puts forward some critics to the book as a whole as well as to some of the arguments contained in the articles that are parto f the edited volume. In that sense, it attempts to point some of the principal debates in the studies and the research on slavery, freedom, national formation, and race relations in Cuba, as well as in other wider debates of significance within Latin American scholarship. Keywords: Cuba. Historigraphy. Racials relation

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    Evolución social, identidades y política del reggae en Jamaica.

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    In Memoriam. Antropólogo, mentor y crítico de vocación: Dr. Carlos Buitrago Ortiz (1930-2013), Profesor Distinguido

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    Antropologías del Caribe Hispano: notas de campo sobre Cuba y Puerto Rico.

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