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         Cuban History:     more books (100)
  1. VOICES OF RESISTANCE: TESTIMONIES OF CUBAN AND CHILEAN WOMEN.(Review) (book review): An article from: The Oral History Review by Janet E. Worrall, 2001-01-01
  2. Jose Marti, the United States, and the Marxist Interpretation of Cuban History by Carlos Ripoll, 1984-01-01
  3. Vidas Cubanas II: Paginas De LA Historia De Cuba : Cuban Lives II : Pages from Cuban History (Cuba Y Sus Jueces) by Jose I. Lasaga, 1988-11
  4. Secret History of the Cuban Missile Crisis, the - "One Hell of a Gamble" - Khrushchev Castro & Kennedy 1958-1964 by Aleksandr and Timothy Naftali Fursenko, 1997
  5. Essays in Cuban Intellectual History (New Concepts in Latino American Cultures) by Rafael Rojas, 2008-03-18
  6. Essays on Cuban History: Historiography and Research by Louis A. Perez, 1995-01
  7. Cuban-Jewish Journeys: Searching for Identity, Home and History in Miami.: An article from: American Jewish History by Uva de Aragon, 2001-12-01
  8. The Cuban Missile Crisis (History Through Newspapers) by Nathaniel Harris, 2002-11-01
  9. Cuba, and the Cubans: Comprising a history of the island of Cuba, its present social, political, and domestic condition: also, its relation to England and the United States, by Richard B Kimball, 1850
  10. The Cuban Name in History by Ancestry.com, 2007-06-25
  11. A Quiet Revolution: An Introduction to the Critical Oral History of the Cuban Missile Crisis At Brown University's Watson Institute for International Studies. (CRITICAL ORAL HISTORY CUBA) by BLIGHT JAMES, 2003
  12. A History of the Cuban Republic, a Study in Hispanic American Politics. by Charles E. Chapman, 1927
  13. The Cuban Missile Crisis (At Issue in History)
  14. United States-Cuban Relations: A Critical History by Esteban Morales, 2008-03-28

41. Sugar And Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959 - Capelinks.com Product Guide
Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 18371959. capelinks.com Product Guide. View shopping cart. Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 1837-1959.
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Shopping Search All categories Apparel Baby Books Classical Music DVD Electronics Kitchen Magazines Popular Music Computers Software Toys Videos Video Games Cell Phones View shopping cart Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959 Author: Oscar Zanetti Alejandro Garcia Oscar Zanetti Lecuona Alejandro Garcia Alvarez ... Franklin W. Knight Binding: Paperback Published: October, 1998 ISBN: Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959 by: Oscar Zanetti Alejandro Garcia Oscar Zanetti Lecuona Alejandro Garcia Alvarez ... Franklin W. Knight Similar Products: Yankee Don't Go Home: Mexican Nationalism, American Business Culture, and the... by Julio Moreno - Usually ships within 24 hours Price: $21.95

42. International Development Studies Saint Mary S University Halifax
Race and Revolution AfroCubans in cuban history, Society and the Cuban Revolution. Overview. Various dimensions of cuban history and culture will be explored.
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/stmary.htm
AfroCubaWeb
Contact
Schedule (with links!)
International Development Studies
Saint Mary's University
Halifax, Canada
IDS 420.1 Special Topics in Development Studies Race and Revolution:
Afro-Cubans in Cuban History, Society and the Cuban Revolution Overview
Cuba remains one of the most controversial and alluring countries. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc and the strengthening of the United States economic embargo, Cuba has occupied a prominent place on the world stage. Despite numerous predictions about imminent collapse, the Cuban Revolution and the government of President Fidel Castro continue to defy the conventional wisdom of the "experts". Indeed, the Cuban Revolution has not only been able to survive, but has also embarked on a period of sustained economic recovery. Moreover, Cuba continues to lead the Third World and compare very favourably with industrialized countries in many social indicators, most notably health and education. However, what is often ignored is the vital Afro-Cuban experience and contribution. The course encompasses a two-week study tour of Cuba and focuses on the Black Cuban experience within Cuban history, particularly the Cuban Revolution. The aim of the course is to connect the issues surrounding marginality and marginalized peoples, groups and collectives within development theory and praxis by examining and locating Cuba - specifically, the Afro-Cuban odyssey - in light of this body of thought and experience.

43. AfroCuban History: A Time Line
Afrocuban history a Time Line 1492 to 1900. Here is a time line of cuban history with links to resources both within this site and elsewhere.
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/history.htm
AfroCubaWeb
Time Line II
: 1900- present
Links
AfroCuban History: a Time Line
1492 to 1900
Here is a time line of Cuban history with links to resources both within this site and elsewhere. It is updated as we get suggestions and acquire more dates and links. This section covers up to 1900. See Time Line II for dates in the 20th and 21st century. We plan to expand the time line before 1492 to cover Native Cuba as soon as we get materials. Christopher Columbus "discovers" Cuba. The Genovese capo's favorite Caribbean money-maker: threaten to chop off Indians' hands off if they don't bring him enough gold. He did Meyer Lansky and Santos Traficante proud. Diego de Velázquez conquers Cuba, fighting the Taíno, the Arawak Ciboney, and other nations, then founds several towns, including Havana. In one gruesome episode, 2500 Taino welcome the Spaniards with a feast, then are slaughtered, disembowled, hacked to pieces until their blood runs as in a river. Hatuey, a Taíno chief who had come to Cuba from Hispaniola to warn his people of the Spaniards, is captured and burned at the stake. The first record of slavery in Cuba. Landowner Amador de Lares gets permission to bring four African slaves from Hispaniola.

44. University Press Of Florida: Essays On Cuban History
b. by Keyword. Essays on cuban history Historiography and Research. by Louis A. Pérez, Jr. Details 320 pages 6
http://www.upf.com/book.asp?id=PEREZS95

45. Cuban Food Market: History
This is a great book for those wishing to refresh their knowlegde or for those exposed to cuban history for the first time. 313 pages.
http://www.cubanfoodmarket.com/Merchant2/merchant.mv?Screen=CTGY&Store_Code=CFM&

46. H-Net Review: Andy Daitsman On Oscar Zanetti Lecuona And Alejandro Garcia, Sugar
Oscar Zanetti Lecuona and Alejandro Garcia. Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 18371959. Trans. Franklin W. Knight and Mary Todd.
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=941944866345

47. Upcoming Events And Cuban History From The Havana Journal
Event Today in cuban history. Date May 20, 2004. On this date in 1902 The United States ended its threeyear military presence in
http://havanajournal.com/calendar/events.php?id=E156

48. Upcoming Events And Cuban History From The Havana Journal
Event Today in cuban history. Date May 01, 2004. May 1 is the official Labor Day holiday in Cuba better known as May Day. CLOSE.
http://havanajournal.com/calendar/events.php?id=E170

49. MSN Encarta - Related Items - Cuba
history. overview of cuban history. Che Guevara killed in Bolivia. Native Americans before Spanish arrival. pictures related to cuban history. preColumbian society.
http://encarta.msn.com/related_761569844_21/history.html
var fSendSelectEvents = true; var fSendExpandCollapseEvents = true; var fCallDisplayUAText = false; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Related Items from Encarta Cuba Cuban Americans, main article Cuban Communism Cuban Missile Crisis Cuban Revolution ... Feedback

50. MSN Encarta - Related Items - Spanish-American War
Spanish Empire, territories lost in the SpanishAmerican War. the war in the context of cuban history. US history, overview of the Spanish-American War.
http://encarta.msn.com/related_761566463_2/the_war_in_the_context_of_Cuban_histo
var fSendSelectEvents = true; var fSendExpandCollapseEvents = true; var fCallDisplayUAText = false; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Related Items from Encarta Spanish-American War impact on American foreign policy Spanish Empire, territories lost in the Spanish-American War the war in the context of Cuban history U.S. history, overview of the Spanish-American War ... , largest and most western island of the West Indies. It forms, with various adjacent islands, the Republic of Cuba. Cuba occupies a central... View article Try MSN Internet Software for FREE! MSN Home My MSN Hotmail ... Feedback

51. Cuban History
A century to be remembered a synopsis of cuban history. THE 19th century ended badly for Cubans. In 1898, the United States’ opportunistic
http://www.cubasocialista.com/history.htm
A century to be remembered: a synopsis of Cuban History THE 19th century ended badly for Cubans. In 1898, the United States’ opportunistic intervention in the war against Spanish colonial rule, which Cuban patriots were on the verge of winning, frustrated hopes for sovereignty and independence. In terms of time, more than 100 years have passed since then; but in terms of history, much more took place in this Caribbean island than in the 19 previous centuries. FROM SPANISH COLONY TO U.S. NEOCOLONY Tomás Estrada Palma's assumption of power on May 20, 1902, with the consent of the U.S. military governor, Leonard Wood, who ran the electoral process, signaled the start of the neocolonial republic in Cuba. With the dissolution of the Cuban Revolutionary Party on December 30, 1898, two days before the official start of the U.S. military occupation, the delegate Tomás Estrada Palma, successor to José Martí in the post, delivered a mortal blow to the yet to be born republic. Cuba was already in crisis at this point, mainly due to Spanish colonialism, but also because of the U.S. military occupation and its consequences of hunger, poverty and unemployment. The fragmentation of the national revolutionary political organization and ideological confusion, with evident distortions in the revolutionary and anti-imperialist thinking of José Martí, exacerbated the situation.

52. Historian: Sugar And Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959. - Review - Book Revi
Print friendly Tell a friend Find subscription deals Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 18371959. Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 1837-1959.
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Tell a friend Find subscription deals Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959. - Review - book review
Historian
Summer, 2000 by Jules R. Benjamin
Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959. By Oscar Zanetti and Alejandro Garcia. Translated by Franklin W. Knight and Mary Todd. (Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1998. Pp. xxviii, 496. $59.95.) The work of University of Havana historians has not been widely disseminated since the 1960s. Even major works have not been translated. Sugar and Railroads is an example of work to which the North American scholarly community has had too little access. Set in a deterministic, though by no means simplistic, Marxism, the book offers access to a rich variety of Cuban archival sources. The goal is to demonstrate "the dialectical relationship between technology and the social conditions for its utilization" (xx). The story, however driven by material forces, is not a simple one. A wide variety of individuals and groups had to work out their compatible or incompatible goals. We read of the conflicts between such groups as the old Spanish merchants (in both Spain and Cuba), the old and new landowners on the island, and the native and foreign capitalists. The roles of technicians, bankers, and suppliers of railway equipment are also considered. Finally, there is an extensive treatment of the difficult shift from slave to free-market labor in the sugar industry, and the consequent rise of a railway proletariat. At many points there is useful information and illuminating insights for scholars who may not share the authors' perspective.

53. Political Turning Points In Modern Cuban History: 3 Revolutions
Political turning points in modern cuban history 3 revolutions. 1898 US intervention in the Cuban war for independenceJose Marti’s failed revolution.
http://www.hist.umn.edu/~rmccaa/MODERN/cubarev/slides.htm
Political turning points in modern Cuban history: 3 revolutions
  • 1898: US intervention in the Cuban war for independenceJose Marti’s failed revolution
    • Platt Amendment mentality: sell-out to the Yankees
    • Gerardo Machado dictatorship, 1925-33
    • 1934: The unfinished revolutionrevolutionary junta overthrown by the army
      • Fulgencio Batista eras: 1934-40 (military), 40-44 (constitutional president), 52-58 (dictator)
      • Democratic interlude: 1940-52
      • 1959: Socialist revolution against Batista, the United States, and Cuban elites
      Chronology of the Cuban Revolution
      • 1952, March 10: Fulgencio Batista seized power
      • 1953, July 26: Fidel Castro attacks the Moncada Barracks and fails.
      • 1956, Nov: Urban insurrections in Havana and the Oriente fail.
      • 1956, Dec. 2: Granma landing in the Oriente is a disaster, but the foco survives.
      • 1957, March, July: Assassinations (13/iii), general strikes and urban insurrections fail.
      • 1958, May-June: Army offensive against guerrillas fails.
      • 1959, Jan 1: Victory of the revolutionaries!
      Cuba: Revolutionary Isle
        Havana urban insurrection (Mar 10, 1952-Dec 31 ‘58)

54. Political Turning Points In Modern Cuban History: 3 Revolutions
Political turning points in modern cuban history 3 revolutions. 4/13/98. Table of Contents. Political turning points in modern cuban history 3 revolutions.
http://www.hist.umn.edu/~rmccaa/MODERN/cubarev/
Political turning points in modern Cuban history: 3 revolutions
Click here to start
Table of Contents
Political turning points in modern Cuban history: 3 revolutions Chronology of the Cuban Revolution Cuba: Revolutionary Isle 1955: Eisenhower administration bestows its blessing on Batista, but in ‘58 began to distance itself from B. ... T Author: Department of History Email: rmccaa@tc.umn.edu Home Page: http://www.hist.umn.edu/~rmccaa Download presentation source

55. Sugar And Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959
Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 18371959. List price $29.95 Our price $29.95. Book Sugar and Railroads A cuban history, 1837-1959 Customer Reviews
http://www.historyamericas.com/Sugar_and_Railroads_A_Cuban_History_18371959_0807
Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959
Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959

by Authors: Oscar Zanetti , Alejandro Garcia , Oscar Zanetti Lecuona , Alejandro Garcia Alvarez , Franklin W. Knight
Released: October, 1998
ISBN: 0807846929
Paperback
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Our price: Book > Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959 > Customer Reviews: Sugar and Railroads: A Cuban History, 1837-1959 > Related Products
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Imperial State and Revolution : The United States and Cuba, 1952-1986

Close Encounters of Empire: Writing the Cultural History of U.S.-Latin American Relations (American Encounters/Global Interactions)
On Becoming Cuban : Identity, Nationality, and Culture ... history of americas

56. Sonidos De Las Américas: Cuba - History Of Cuban Concert Music
Translate this page A History of Cuban Concert Music. It is in the 20th century that Cuban art music fully develops into a major contribution to cuban history.
http://www.americancomposers.org/cubahistory.htm
view
Sonidos: Cuba
schedule of events
more about Sonidos: Cuba ... aco homepage "Cuban music clearly offers two sides of a coin: one directly nurtured by folkloric elements and popular (and subsequently commercial) forms of expression, and another, more abstract and complex, where composers from Cuba have followed the difficult route of art music." view Sonidos: Cuba
schedule of events
for tickets
to CARNEGIE HALL
events call
CarnegieCharge:
Or visit
Box Office
FOR OTHER EVENTS
call the appropriate
box office listed
for that event FOR GENERAL INFO CALL ACO at 212.977.8495
view Sonidos: Cuba schedule of events
por Aurelio de la Vega Ya al final del siglo dieciocho esta mezcla musical hispano-africana produce una música bai-lable de poderosas raíces populares que, dentro de la órbita social secular, lentamente desplaza a las danzas europeas que habían constituido hasta entonces el entretenimiento fundamental de la nueva y emergente burguesía criolla. El compositor e investigador cubano Carlo Borbolla (1902-1990) afirma que el básico, seminal y siempre presente "tresillo cubano" (una semifusa, una fusa y otra semifusa, seguida ésta por dos fusas) apareció cuando los músicos populares interpretaban erróneamente, desde un punto de vista rímico, el tresillo europeo, el cual era un enunciado rítmico de dos contra tres en cómputo de tiempo igual. El siglo diecinueve es testigo de la rápida evolución de esa música danzable rítmicamente dife-rente de los modelos europeos, la cual ejerce una influencia decisiva en las sofisticadas obras de piano de Saumell y de Ignacio Cervantes (1847-1905), así como en la música fuertemente romántica de Nicolás Ruiz Espadero (1832- 1890). Es tambien durante este siglo diecinueve que Cuba produce sus primeros instrumentistas de renombre internacional, del pianista José Manuel ("Lico") Jiménez (1855-1917) y de la pianista y compositora Cecilia Aritzi (1856-1930) a los violinistas Claudio José Domingo Brindis de Salas (1852-1911) y José White (1836-1912).

57. Cuba
cuban history, Cuba Brief History of Cuba Governors and CaptainGenerals Filibuster Movement (1848-1856) Cubans in the US Civil War
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/cuba2.htm
Cuban History Cuba
Brief History of Cuba

Governors and Captain-Generals

Filibuster Movement
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Fidel Castro

POLITICIANS
Guas Inclan, Rafael

Masferrer Rojas, Rolando

Ochoa y Ochoa, Emilio "Millo"

Varona Loredo, Manuel Antonio de
...
Insurgent Cuba: Race, Nation, and Revolution, 1868-1898
(Ada Ferrer) War of Independence Spanish-Cuban-American War Platt Amendment Good Neighbor Policy ... Plot Foiled Time , Aug. 7, 1944) Cuba: Happy Days Time , Feb. 7, 1949) The Autentico Party and the Political Opposition in Cuba, 1952-57 The Cuban Revolution Partido del Pueblo Libre poster (June 1958) Partido del Pueblo Libre poster (June 1958) Cuban Support for Revolutionary Movements Anti-Castro Belligerence 1959-1999 Operation Peter Pan Wasn't Political Human Rights in Cuba ... U.S. State Department Dispatches 1960

58. Cuban History
cuban history. History Christopher Columbus landed on the island of Cuba on October 28, 1492, during his initial westward voyage.
http://users.aber.ac.uk/tpt3/cubanhistory.htm
Cuban History
History Christopher Columbus landed on the island of Cuba on October 28, 1492, during his initial westward voyage. In honour of the daughter of Ferdinand V and Isabella I of Spain, his benefactors, Columbus named it Juana, the first of several names he successively applied to the island. It eventually became known as Cuba, from its aboriginal name, Cubanascnan. Colonization by Spain When Columbus first landed on Cuba it was inhabited by the Ciboney, a friendly tribe related to the Arawak. Colonization of the island began in 1511, when the Spanish soldier Diego Velazquez established the town of Baracoa. Velázquez subsequently founded several other settlements, including Santiago de Cuba (1514) and Havana (1515). The Spanish transformed Cuba into a supply base for their expeditions to Mexico and Florida. As a result of savage treatment and exploitation, the aborigines became, by the middle of the 16th century, nearly extinct, forcing the colonists to depend on imported black slaves for the operation of the mines and plantations. Despite frequent raids by buccaneers and naval units of rival and enemy powers, the island prospered throughout the 16th and 17th centuries. Restrictions imposed by the Spanish authorities on commercial activities were generally disregarded by the colonists, who resorted to illicit trade with privateers and neighbouring colonies. Following the conclusion in 1763 of the Seven Years' War, during which the English captured Havana, the Spanish government liberalized its Cuban policy, encouraging colonization, expansion of commerce, and development of agriculture. Between 1774 and 1817 the population increased from about 161,000 to more than 550,000. The remaining restrictions on trade were officially eliminated in 1818, further promoting material and cultural advancement.

59. The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Cuba
Despite antiIsrael sentiment that existed in Cuba, the only time blatant anti-Semitic attacks occurred in all of cuban history was during the Gulf War.
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/vjw/Cuba.html
The Virtual Jewish History Tour
Cuba
by Rebecca Weiner
History
Communities in Camaguey and Santiago and Havana

The Revolution

Jewish Life
...
Present-Day Jewish Life
History
It is unclear when the first Jews arrived in Cuba, some arrived after the expulsion from Spain in 1492 . Francisco Gomez de Leon, a Jew, was put on trial during the Inquisition in Havana. He was later executed in Cartagena and his large fortune was confiscated. There is little information about Jews in Cuba until the late 19 th century, when a larger Jewish community was formed. In the late 1800's, Jews from the Dutch Antilles settled in Cuba. They supported Jose Marti, who liberated Cuba from Spanish colonial rule in 1898. Following the Spanish American War, a number of American Jewish war veterans settled in Cuba and founded a congregation in Havana in 1904. Cuban Jews were involved in all aspects of Cuban society and economy. Jews were instrumental in the sugar cane business; they brought the sugar cane from Madeira to Brazil and to the Antilles. Jews also were the first ones to use a protective cloth used when growing tobacco to protect the plants from sun and wind. These protective coverings are still used today to produce the highest quality tobaccos leaves in the world. A large number of Jews immigrated to Cuba from 1910 until 1920, including

60. The Cuban Revolution: Origins, Course, & Legacy
PerezStable traces magnificantly the origins and failures of the Cuban revolution to underlying currents in cuban history. This
http://20th-century-history-books.com/0195127498.html

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Search High Volume Orders Links ... Yitzhak Rabin Additional Subjects Madame Mao: The White-Boned Demon Brawl: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at Mixed Martial Arts Competition Michael Wintle Yves Charles Zarka ... Boarding Party: The Last Action of the Calcutta Light Horse
Written by Marifeli Perez-Stable
Published by Oxford Press (December 1998)
ISBN 0195127498
Price $25.95
Customer Reviews This book provides an excellent background to social dynamics in Cuba before, during and after the Cuban Revolution, and does a good job analyzing its causes and consequences. It is indeed a must for anyone trying to understand the Revolution. The right wing exile community in Florida will not like this book because it is one of the few that consciously tries to be objective, but that should not dissuade other readers from purchasing this book. It is a bit too crammed with charts and statistics in places, which makes it cumbersome, but those sections are skimmable. I will certainly use it in my undergraduate classes. Despite attempts to keep an open mind, I grew increasingly annoyed at the omissions, exaggerations and half-truths passed off as researched facts in this book. The author calls Cuba - a country under a dictator which holds no elections - a "democracy" and extols the virtues of the revolution without ever presenting the views and the injustices perpetrated against those who opposed the revolution. It is a shame that a work which could have been an objective scholarly book instead is little better than a propaganda pamphlet.

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