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Cuba from Emancipation to Revolution (Honors)


Course Description

Examination of Cuba's social history from the eighteenth century to the present. Focus on the struggles for freedom from slavery, Spanish colonialism, U.S. imperialism, and other forms of oppression. The class will seek to explain how the various sectors striving for "freedom" in the island--especially Afro-Cubans--understood their liberation.


Athena Title

History of Cuba Honors


Equivalent Courses

Not open to students with credit in HIST 4211, HIST 6211


Prerequisite

A 2000-level HIST course and permission of Honors


Grading System

A - F (Traditional)


Student Learning Outcomes

  • By the end of this course, students will be able to arrive at conclusions about Cuban history by gathering and weighing evidence, logical argument, and listening to counter argument.
  • By the end of this course, students will be able to write stylistically appropriate papers and essays. Students will be able to analyze ideas and evidence, organize their thoughts, and revise and edit their finished essays.
  • By the end of this course, students will be able to identify how the history of modern Cuba shaped diverse social and cultural attitudes toward empire and colonialism, capitalism and socialism, race and ethnicity, and freedom and justice, encouraging them to understand diverse worldviews and experiences.
  • By the end of this course, students will be able to apply appropriate methodological approaches to their analysis of primary sources and to organize their evidence to show historical continuities and discontinuities.
  • By the end of this course, students will be able to generate their own research question or topic, locate suitable primary and secondary sources, and synthesize their ideas in novel ways.
  • By the end of this course, students will be able to initiate, manage, complete, and evaluate their independent research projects in stages and to give and receive constructive feedback through the peer review process.

Topical Outline

  • 1. Cuba and the Spanish-American empire
  • 2. Sugar and slavery in Cuba
  • 3. Slaveholding: Comparisons between Cuba and the U.S.
  • 4. The functioning of sugar plantations and mills
  • 5. The social functions of racism: A look at marriage
  • 6. Afro-Cuban visions of freedom
  • 7. Theorizing Afro-Cuban and African-American Cultures
  • 8. Creolization, Transculturation, and Cuban religions
  • 9. The First Cuban Wars of Independence
  • 10. Emancipation and Early Post-Emancipation Society
  • 11. The War of 1898
  • 12. "Racial democracy" and "progress" in the republic
  • 13. The "Race War" of 1912
  • 14. Politics and culture during Machado's Regime
  • 15. The revolution of 1933
  • 16. Cuba under Batista
  • 17. Castro and the July 26th Movement
  • 18. Revolutionary projects
  • 19. The Balance sheet: health, education, and living standards
  • 20. Cubans in exile
  • 21. Cuba after the Soviet collapse