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Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)

Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba By Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)

Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba by Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)


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Summary

This book analyzes the triumphs and failures of the Castro regime in the area of race relations. This book challenges arguments that the regime eliminated racial inequality or that it was profoundly racist. Through interviews, historical materials, and survey research, Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba provides a balanced view.

Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba Summary

Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba by Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)

This book analyzes the triumphs and failures of the Castro regime in the area of race relations. It places the Cuban revolution in a comparative and international framework and challenges arguments that the regime eliminated racial inequality or that it was profoundly racist. Through interviews, historical materials, and survey research, it provides a balanced view. The book maintains that Cuba has not been a racial democracy as some have argued. However, it also argues that Cuba has done more than any other society to eliminate racial inequality. The contemporary outlook of the book demonstrates how much of Cuban racial ideology was unchanged by the revolution. Thus, the current implementation of market reforms and in particular tourism has exacerbated racial inequalities. Finally, it holds that despite these shortcomings, the regime remains popular among blacks because they perceive their alternatives of the US and the Miami Exile community to be far worse.

Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba Reviews

To my knowledge, Mark Sawyer's Racial Politics in Postrevolutionary Cuba is the first work that approaches that controversy-ridden problematique from as many convergent angles, all of which are deeply informed by a rich personal and not merely theoretical understanding of the subtle and multidimensional issues attached to racism as an historical and structural phenomena. Departing from the three traditional paradigmatic approaches to the question of race politics in Cuba-(continued underneath)
Latin American exceptionalism, Marxian economicism and Black Nationalism Sawyer has broken new grounds that open up fresh analytical possibilities for the comprehension of race politics not solely in Cuba but in general. Indeed, one must keep in mind that, outside of the Haitian Revolution of 1804, the Cuban Revolution represented the most radical revolutionary experiment ever undertaken in race/class reconfiguration in the Western hemisphere. A brilliant analytical work, this book additionally provides a rare moment where objective scholarship and human sensibility fuse to give statistical data a truly human face. Carlos Moore, Author of Castro the Blacks and Africa
Sawyer combines personal anecdotes, interviews, survey data analysis, and historical coverage of prominent events to illuminate the complex realities of race relations in Cuba. Highly recommended. Choice

About Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)

Mark Sawyer currently holds appointments as an Assistant Professor with the Department of Political Science and with the Bunche Institute for African American Studies at UCLA. He is currently on leave until 2005 as a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy Program at the University of California at Berkeley. In 1999, he received his PhD in Political Science from the University of Chicago. He joined the faculty at UCLA in 1999 and has taught undergraduate and graduate courses on the politics of the African Diaspora, urban politics, African American Political Thought, and a General Education Cluster in Interracial Dynamics. Professor Sawyer has published articles in journals that include: the Journal of Political Psychology, Perspectives on Politics, and SOULS.

Table of Contents

1. Race cycles, racial hierarchy, and inclusionary discrimination: a dynamic approach; 2. Freedom and discrimination: uneven inequality and inclusion in prerevolutionary Cuba; 3. Race and revolution; 4. Match made in heaven or strange bedfellows? Black radicals in Castro's Cuba; 5. Race and daily life in Cuba during the special period: part I - interview data; 6. Race and daily life in Cuba during the special period: part II - survey data; 7. Racial politics in Miami.

Additional information

NPB9780521848077
9780521848077
0521848075
Racial Politics in Post-Revolutionary Cuba by Mark Q. Sawyer (University of California, Los Angeles)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2005-11-28
222
Winner of Ralph Bunche Award - American Political Science Association 2007 Winner of W. E. B. DuBois Outstanding Book Award, National Conference of Black Political Scientists 2007
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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