In this Book

Patriots and Traitors in Revolutionary Cuba: 1961-1981

Book
Lillian Guerra
2023
summary
Authorities in postrevolutionary Cuba worked to establish a binary society in which citizens were either patriots or traitors. This all-or-nothing approach reflected in the familiar slogan “patria o muerte” (fatherland or death) has recently been challenged in protests that have adopted the theme song “patria y vida” (fatherland and life), a collaboration by exiles that, predictably, has been banned in Cuba itself. Lillian Guerra excavates the rise of a Soviet-advised Communist culture controlled by state institutions and the creation of a multidimensional system of state security whose functions embedded themselves into daily activities and individual consciousness and reinforced these binaries. But despite public performance of patriotism, the life experience of many Cubans was somewhere in between. Guerra explores these in-between spaces and looks at Cuban citizens’ complicity with authoritarianism, leaders’ exploitation of an earnest anti-imperialist nationalism, and the duality of an existence that contains elements of both support and betrayal of a nation and of an ideology. 

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Series Page, Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-xii

Introduction. From "¡Patria o Muerte!" to "¡Patria y Vida!": Excavating the Nation from the State, Explaining Cuba's Internal Cold War

pp. 1-34

Chapter 1. Lessons in Loving the Revolution: Political Education, Violence, and the 1961 Literacy Campaign

pp. 35-76

Chapter 2. Securing the State, 1961-1966: Fear, Surveillance, and National Liberation

pp. 77-118

Chapter 3. The Generous Revolution: Rehabilitation, Political Prisoners, and Coercive Inclusion in the 1960s

pp. 119-150

Chapter 4. The "Anti-Revolution" of the Late 1960s: Reeducation, Integration, and Everyday Authoritarianism

pp. 151-188

Chapter 5. Young Communists, Former Slum Dwellers, and the Lewis Project in Cuba, 1968-1972

pp. 189-222

Chapter 6. Labor, the Pedagogy of Love, and Cuba's Child Revolutionaries, 1968-1972

pp. 223-252

Chapter 7. Los Años Rojos (The Red Years): Cuba in the 1970s

pp. 253-302

Chapter 8. The Road to El Mariel: Perfectionism, Alienation, Exhaustion, and the New Man

pp. 303-338

Chapter 9. "We Are Happy Here": Amplifying the Revolutionary Script and the Crisis of El Mariel

pp. 339-390

Epilogue. The Paradigm of Patriots and Traitors Revisited: Exodus as Opposition and the Uncertain Future of Democracy Lost

pp. 391-408

Notes

pp. 409-460

Bibliography

pp. 461-478

Index

pp. 479-485
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