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To browse Academia. This dissertation explains the rise of a culture of racial silence in a time of heightening racial exclusion in Cuba at the turn of the twentieth century. Employing a case study of Cienfuegos, a port city on the south-central coast of the island, I examine gendered articulations of inequality among Cuban separatists between the outbreak of the war of independence in and the inauguration of the Cuban republic in I argue that Cuban struggles for political power in the wake of the American military intervention and military occupation fundamentally transformed separatist visions of citizenship, increasingly restricting its boundaries along racial lines.
Separatists expressed racial exclusion in terms of masculinity. During the first years of the war, a discourse of racial brotherhood afforded inclusion to all men regardless of race or class.
There were two key turning points thereafter. When Cubans entered the final year of the anticolonial struggle and es Ulrike Schmieder. This article presents some of the results of a research project which compares the social processes following slave emancipation in Cuba and Martinique as part of a wider comparative project on post-slavery societies in the Caribbean and Africa.
The article focuses on the research on Cuba from the abolition of slavery until the beginning of the Independence War of The text looks at the testimonies left by slaves, patrocinados "apprentices" and libertos freedmen during the process of emancipation, examining in particular how male and female identities were defined and transformed in this process of social transition. This research represents a form of archaeology, excavating discourses of subaltern ised men and women whose voices were long ignored in writing the history of nation states or colonial empires.