Lexington Books
Pages: 268
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4985-6873-9 • Hardback • August 2018 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-6875-3 • Paperback • July 2020 • $47.99 • (£37.00)
978-1-4985-6874-6 • eBook • August 2018 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Emily J. Kirk is Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of International Development Studies at Dalhousie University.
Anna Clayfield is lecturer in Spanish and Latin American studies at the University of Chester.
Isabel Story is lecturer in the School of Art and Design at Nottingham Trent University and is a visiting research fellow at the University of Nottingham.
List of Acronyms
Introduction: Cuba’s Forgotten Decade
Section One: Politics and International Relations
Chapter 1: Raúl’s Decade? Or the First Swing of the Pendulum?
Antoni Kapcia
Chapter 2: Havana and Moscow in the 1970s: “Sovietization” in an Era of Détente
Mervyn Bain
Chapter 3: David Rising: Cuba and its Northern Goliath in the 1970s
H. Michael Erisman
Chapter 4: Canada-Cuba Relations in the 1970s
John M. Kirk
Chapter 5: Militarized by Moscow? Re-examining Soviet Influence on Cuba in the 1970s
Anna Clayfield
Section Two: Healthcare and Education
Chapter 6: No Secret Cure: Why the 1970s Hold the Mystery to Cuba’s Health Paradox
Robert Huish
Chapter 7: Sexual Education in the 1970s: A Health-Based Approach
Emily J. Kirk
Chapter 8: Cuban Women and the State: Women’s Lives in the 1970s and the New Reproductive Bargain
Hope Bastian Martínez
Chapter 9: The “Three Ps” (Perfecting, Professionalization, and Pragmatism) and their Limitations for Understanding Cuban Education in the 1970s
Rosi Smith
Chapter 10: Is Class Race, and Race Class? Blacks, the Cuban Revolution, and the 1970s
Isaac Saney
Section Three: Culture
Chapter 11: Black Skin, Red Masks? Decolonization and Literature in 1970s Cuba
Par Kumaraswami
Chapter 12: Utopian Cultural Construction: Cuban Cultural Organization in the 1970s
Isabel Story
Chapter 13: Cinema and Culture in the 1970s: The Art of Autonomy
Guy Baron
Chapter 14: “Seremos (otra vez) como el Che”? Angola as an “alternative narrative” to Cuba in the 1970s
Raquel Ribeiro
Chapter 15: Within the Revolution, Everyone: Cuba, Youth, and Interrogating the 1970s Paradigm
Anne Luke
Conclusion
Index
About the Contributors
This collection offers a sound challenge to received historical wisdom about Cuba. Most fundamentally, it is a great example of what happens to historical truths when cultural, social, and political life are examined with one lens. This is as true for Cuba in the 1970s as it is anywhere, anytime.
— Karen Dubinsky, Queen’s University
A wide ranging look at all aspects of Cuba in the 1970s, a crucial inflexion point between the freewheeling revolution 'por la libre' of the 1960s and the institutionalized system that followed. Anyone interested in understanding the origins of contemporary Cuba should not miss this thoughtful assessment of an important yet often neglected decade.
— William LeoGrande, American University