Cuban émigrés and independence in the nineteenth century Gulf world /

During the violent years of war marking Cuba's final push for independence from Spain, over 3,000 Cuban emigres, men and women, rich and poor, fled to Mexico. But more than a safe haven, Mexico was a key site, Dalia Antonia Muller argues, from which the expatriates helped launch a mobile and po...

詳細記述

書誌詳細
第一著者: Muller, Dalia Antonia (著者)
フォーマット: Licensed eBooks
言語:英語
出版事項: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press [2017]
シリーズ:Envisioning Cuba.
オンライン・アクセス:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469631998_muller
目次:
  • Introduction: A case apart?
  • Nineteenth-century Cuban migrants in the Gulf world
  • Cuban communities in late nineteenth-century Mexico
  • Cuban revolutionary politics in diaspora
  • Internationalizing Cuba libre: Cuban insurgent diplomacy and the building of transnational solidarities
  • Spanish immigrants, the Mexican state, and the fight for Cuba española
  • Affirming americanismo: desespañolización and the defense of America
  • Epilogue: the legacies of Cuban-Mexican solidarities.