Cuba's Wild East

A Literary Geography of Oriente

Peter Hulme

Peter Hulme

Distributed for Liverpool University Press

455 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2011
Cloth $120.00 ISBN: 9781846317484 Published February 2012 For sale in North America only

As a whole, Cuban history, culture, and art are often misconstrued with a heritage specific to Havana. In Cuba’s Wild East, Peter Hulme attempts to right this wrong, focusing on the eastern region of the island and the specific fictions, poetries, locations, and histories that constitute a specific eastern culture. Examining a region with a rich insurgent and revolutionary history, Peter Hulme examines the stories of rebellion, heroism, and sacrifice that are so intimately tied to the places and sites that have now become part of a national pantheon, at the same time showing the international influence of US journalists and novelists whose presence in Cuban literature alongside native Cuban writers further defines the region as a place of encounter. 

Contents
List of illustrations and maps
Notes on language and translations
Introduction

1. James J. O’Kelly at Jiguaní (1873)
2. José Martí at Vega del Jobo (1895)
3. Richard Harding Davis in Santiago de Cuba (1897)
4. Edward Stratemeyer at Siboney (1898)
5. Andrew Summers Rowan in Bayamo (1898)
6. Josephine Herbst in Realengo 18 (1935)
7. Antonio Núñez Jiménez on Pico Turquino (1945)
8. ‘Less than human’: Guantánamo Bay (2002)

Envoi
Glossary
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Index
For more information, or to order this book, please visit http://www.press.uchicago.edu
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