This article considers the friendship between the Cuban leader José Martí and the US journalist Charles Anderson Dana in relation to questions of transnationalism, print culture, modernist aesthetics, and the politics of dissent during the era of the Cuban War of Independence (1895–8). It investigates the radical potential and aesthetic difficulties of rendering genuine affection in print at a time in which American friendliness towards Cuba often served to mask imperialist intentions. I offer a reading of Charles Dana’s obituary for José Martí as a text that destabilizes assumptions about Cuban–American relations in the late nineteenth century by presenting an alternative political vision that incorporated the possibility of an autonomous ...
“Cuba’s Anglo-American Colony in Times of Revolution, 1952-1961” explores how, in the context of rev...
The essays in this book explore the political, social and cultural complexity of the relations betwe...
This thesis challenges the idea that the diplomatic philosophy of President Franklin Delano Roosevel...
This article considers the friendship between the Cuban leader José Martí and the US journalist Char...
This article considers the friendship between the Cuban leader José Martí and the US journalist Char...
This article examines the role that Revolutionary Mexican foreign policy played within Mexican and C...
This article explores the portrayal of the first Cuban war of independence against Spain (Ten Years’...
This article analyzes the political and intellectual trajectory of Cuban José Martí (1853-1895). The...
textThis dissertation examines U.S.-Cuban cultural exchange around the Cuban revolutions of 1933 and...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
José Martí (1853-1895) is commonly accepted by Cubans and foreigners alike as the creator of the Rep...
abstract: During the mid-1930s in Cuba, Ernest Hemingway befriended Cuban artist Antonio Gattorno (1...
This paper aims to illustrate the many ways in which the Cuban Revolution shaped the lives of the Cu...
In October 1868, a group of Cuban rebels from the Province of Bayamo took arms against the Spanish r...
Andrew Hakes is a history major. His area of interest within history is Latin America, specifically ...
“Cuba’s Anglo-American Colony in Times of Revolution, 1952-1961” explores how, in the context of rev...
The essays in this book explore the political, social and cultural complexity of the relations betwe...
This thesis challenges the idea that the diplomatic philosophy of President Franklin Delano Roosevel...
This article considers the friendship between the Cuban leader José Martí and the US journalist Char...
This article considers the friendship between the Cuban leader José Martí and the US journalist Char...
This article examines the role that Revolutionary Mexican foreign policy played within Mexican and C...
This article explores the portrayal of the first Cuban war of independence against Spain (Ten Years’...
This article analyzes the political and intellectual trajectory of Cuban José Martí (1853-1895). The...
textThis dissertation examines U.S.-Cuban cultural exchange around the Cuban revolutions of 1933 and...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
José Martí (1853-1895) is commonly accepted by Cubans and foreigners alike as the creator of the Rep...
abstract: During the mid-1930s in Cuba, Ernest Hemingway befriended Cuban artist Antonio Gattorno (1...
This paper aims to illustrate the many ways in which the Cuban Revolution shaped the lives of the Cu...
In October 1868, a group of Cuban rebels from the Province of Bayamo took arms against the Spanish r...
Andrew Hakes is a history major. His area of interest within history is Latin America, specifically ...
“Cuba’s Anglo-American Colony in Times of Revolution, 1952-1961” explores how, in the context of rev...
The essays in this book explore the political, social and cultural complexity of the relations betwe...
This thesis challenges the idea that the diplomatic philosophy of President Franklin Delano Roosevel...