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E-book: Measures of Equality: Social Science, Citizenship, and Race in Cuba, 1902-1940

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  • Format: 256 pages
  • Series: Envisioning Cuba
  • Pub. Date: 12-Oct-2005
  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780807876244
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 38,99 €*
  • * the price is final i.e. no additional discount will apply
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  • Format: 256 pages
  • Series: Envisioning Cuba
  • Pub. Date: 12-Oct-2005
  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780807876244

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In the years following Cuba's independence, nationalists aimed to transcend racial categories in order to create a unified polity, yet racial and cultural heterogeneity posed continual challenges to these liberal notions of citizenship. Alejandra Bronfman traces the formation of Cuba's multiracial legal and political order in the early Republic by exploring the responses of social scientists, such as Fernando Ortiz and Israel Castellanos, and black and mulatto activists, including Gustavo Urrutia and Nicolas Guillen, to the paradoxes of modern nationhood. Law, science, and the social sciences - which, during this era, enjoyed growing status in Cuba as well as in many other countries - played central roles in producing knowledge and shaping social categories in postindependence Cuba. Anthropologists, criminologists, and eugenicists embarked on projects intended to employ the tools of science to rid Cuba of the last vestiges of a colonial past. Meanwhile, the legal arena created both new freedoms and new modes of repression. Black and mulatto intellectuals and activists, working to ensure that citizenship offered concrete advantages rather than empty promises, appropriated changing social scientific and legal categories and turned them to their own uses. In the midst of several decades of intermittent racial violence and expanding social and political mobilization by Cubans of African descent, debates among intellectuals and activists, state officials, and legislators transformed not only understandings of race, but also the terms of citizenship for all Cubans.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(16)
1: Unsettled and Nomadic: Law, Anthropology, and Race 17(20)
2: Social Science and the Negro Brujo 37(30)
3: Barbarism and Its Discontents 67(20)
4: Contested Histories: Public Memory and Collective Identities 87(20)
5: Social Science, State-Making, and the Politics of Time 107(28)
6: The Politics of Blackness on the Eve of Revolution 135(24)
7: From Comparsas to Constitutions 159(24)
Epilogue 183(4)
Notes 187(20)
Bibliography 207(22)
Index 229


Alejandra Bronfman is assistant professor of history at the University of British Columbia.