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This article examines the interplay between city and country in the earliest years of the Cuban Revolution of It argues that the mass movement of Cubans, especially youths, between urban and rural areas was a major factor in contributing to the radical consciousness of the s. At the same time, these early initiatives also contributed to the growing disaffection with the Cuban revolution.
Such a focus is highly justifiable for a region that was, until recently, predominantly rural, had economies based on export agriculture, and in which a major axis of political and social tension was the issue of highly inequitable land distribution.
This scholarly focus on the peasantry has resulted in many excellent studies that have laid important foundations for our understandings of rural participation in revolution. We know less than we should about the participation of urban social classes, the transformations to urban institutions and the constructed environment, as well as the changes to the symbolism of city and country during revolutions. These early initiatives often produced, both by accident and by design, mass movements between city and countryside, especially of young people.
Both explicitly and implicitly, many of the earliest transformations of the revolution also raised a series of questions about city and country, such as who had a right to the city, and what rights accrued to the city and its inhabitants.