Cuba Between Empires, 1878-1902University of Pittsburgh Press, 1983 - 490 páginas Cuban independence arrived formally on May 20, 1902, with the raising of the Cuban flag in Havana - a properly orchestrated and orderly inauguration of the new republic. But something had gone awry. Republican reality fell far short of the separatist ideal. In an unusually powerful book that will appeal to the general reader as well as to the specialist, Louis A. Perez, Jr., recounts the story of the critical years when Cuba won its independence from Spain only to fall in the American orbit. The last quarter of the nineteenth century found Cuba enmeshed in a complicated colonial environment, tied to the declining Spanish empire yet economically dependent on the newly ascendant United States. Rebellion against Spain had involved two generations of Cubans in major but fruitless wars. By careful examination of the social and economic changes occurring in Cuba, and of the political content of the separatist movement, the author argues that the successful insurrection of 1895-98 was not simply the last of the New World rebellions against European colonialism. It was the first of a genre that would become increasingly familiar in the twentieth century: a guerrilla war of national liberation aspiring to the transformation of society. The third player in the drama was the United States. For almost a century, the United States had pursuedthe acquistion of Cuba. Stepping in when Spain was defeated, the Americans occupied Cuba ostensibly to prepare it for independence but instead deliberately created institutions that restored the social hierarchy and guaranteed political and economic dependence. It was not the last time the U.S. intervention would thwart the Cuban revolutionary impulse. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 91
... island's traditional Creole elites , who after Zanjon found au- tonomism considerably more convivial to their ideological temperament , if not to their class interests . If the Pact of Zanjon precipitated a rupture within separatist ...
... island , life soon returned to normal , but it would never be the same . The war spanned a changing era in Cuban history , and by the following decade that time of transition was coming to an end . The war had pro- foundly disrupted the ...
... island east to west . In Santiago de Cuba , Ballou found the local gas monopoly " on the verge of bankruptcy , like nearly everything else of a business character in Cuba . " In Cienfuegos , Ballou met a local sugar planter in crisis ...
... island . In the closing decades of the nineteenth century , the trans- figuration of planter nationality placed the object of planter allegiance above national interests and located the sources of planter patronage out- side the island ...
... island , the export and import trades of Cuba based thereon , each including hundreds of minor industries , such as the agricultural and mechanical trades , store - houses , wharves , lighters , stevedors , brokers , clerks and bankers ...
Contenido
3 | |
39 | |
57 | |
73 | |
An Imperfect Consensus | 89 |
Convergence and Divergence in Cuban Separatism | 109 |
Rebellion of the Loyal | 139 |
The Passing of Spanish Sovereignty | 165 |
Purpose Without Policy | 269 |
Collaboration and Conflict | 283 |
The Electoral Imperative | 303 |
From Amendment to Appendix | 315 |
The Construction of a Colonial Army | 329 |
Sugar Reciprocity and the Reconstruction of the Colonial Economy | 345 |
A General Understanding | 367 |
Postscript to the ColonyPrologue to the Republic | 375 |
Shades of a Shadow | 179 |
The Infelicitous Alliance | 195 |
From Allies to Adversaries | 211 |
Peace Without Victory | 229 |
Dissent and Dissolution | 249 |
Notes | 389 |
Bibliography | 449 |
Index | 481 |