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Introduction - Unfinished Histories

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Vicky Unruh
Affiliation:
University of Kansas
Jacqueline Loss
Affiliation:
University of Connecticut
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Summary

This introduction first examines what the shifting shapes, geographic relocations, and contextual debates embodied in sculpted monuments to Cuba’s literary-cultural figures tell us about the travels over time and location of Cuban literary culture itself, in order to posit the antimonumentalizing approach to its topic taken by The Cambridge History of Cuban Literature, recognizing the always unfinished, dynamic quality of such histories as they are told and retold from different locations. Exemplifying this approach, the introduction unpacks the complexities inherent in the terms constituting the volume’s title – “history,” “Cuban,” and “literature” – for a book crafted in the twenty-first century, as well as the challenges of literary-cultural “translation” implicit in a volume written in English and conceptualized from the United States about a literary tradition created primarily in Spanish, but also in French, German, English, and, at moments, in Haitian Creole or Kreyòl or Angolan Portuguese. After then reviewing the book’s relationship to existing scholarship, the introduction offers brief summaries of the book’s forty-six essays by fifty-one contributing authors.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Works Cited

Alonso, Randy. “Randy Alonso habla de excubanos.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sd92NImKHRA.Google Scholar
Civantos, Christina. “The Pliable Page: Turn-of-the-21st-Century Reworkings of Villaverde’s Cecilia Valdés.Latin American Literary Review, vol. 49, no. 99, Fall 2022, pp. 212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fornet, Ambrosio. El libro en Cuba: Siglos XVIII y XIX. Letras Cubanas, 1994.Google Scholar
Fornet, Ambrosio . Memorias recobradas. Capiro, 2000.Google Scholar
González Echevarría, Roberto. Cuban Fiestas. Yale UP, 2010.Google Scholar
Lisenby, David. “Frustrated Mulatta Aspirations: Reiterations of ‘Cecilia Valdés’ in Post-Soviet Cuba. Afro-Hispanic Review, vol. 31, no. 1, Spring 2012, pp. 87104.Google Scholar
Richard, Nelly. “Sites of Memory, Emptying Remembrance.” Translated by Michael J. Lazzara, Telling Ruins in Latin America, edited by Lazzara, Michael J. and Unruh, Vicky, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, pp. 175182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vicent, Mauricio. “The Largest Mass Emigration in Cuba Continues.” El País, 13 Sept. 2022. https://english.elpais.com/international/2022-09-14/the-largest-mass-emigration-in-cubas-history-continues.html.Google Scholar

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