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Rescuing Our Roots - The African Anglo-Caribbean Diaspora in Contemporary Cuba (Paperback)
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Rescuing Our Roots - The African Anglo-Caribbean Diaspora in Contemporary Cuba (Paperback)
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Provides invaluable insight into the histories and lives of Cubans
who trace their origins to the Anglo-Caribbean."-Robert Whitney,
author of State and Revolution in Cuba: Mass Mobilization and
Political Change, 1920-1940 "Adds a missing piece to the existing
literature about the renewal of black activism in Cuba, all the
while showing the links and fractures between pre- and post-1959
society."-Devyn Spence Benson, Louisiana State University In the
early twentieth century, laborers from the British West Indies
immigrated to Cuba, attracted by employment opportunities. The
Anglo-Caribbean communities flourished, but after 1959, many of
their cultural institutions were dismantled: the revolution
dictated that in the name of unity there would be no hyphenated
Cubans. This book turns an ethnographic lens on their descendants
who-during the Special Period in the 1990s-moved to "rescue their
roots" by revitalizing their ethnic associations and reestablishing
ties outside the island. Based on Andrea J. Queeley's fieldwork in
Santiago and Guantanamo, Rescuing Our Roots looks at local and
regional identity formations as well as racial politics in
revolutionary Cuba. Queeley argues that, as the island experienced
a resurgence in racism due in part to the emergence of the dual
economy and the reliance on tourism, Anglo-Caribbean Cubans
revitalized their communities and sought transnational connections
not just in the hope of material support but also to challenge the
association between blackness, inferiority, and immorality. Their
desire for social mobility, political engagement, and a better
economic situation operated alongside the fight for black
respectability. Unlike most studies of black Cubans, which focus on
Afro-Cuban religion or popular culture, Queeley's penetrating
investigation offers a view of strategies and modes of black
belonging that transcend ideological, temporal, and spatial
boundaries.
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