With "Gay Cuban Nation," Emilio Bejel looks at Cuba's markedly homoerotic culture through writings about homosexuality, placing them in the social and political contexts that led up to the Cuban Revolution. By reading against the grain of a wide variety of novels, short stories, autobiographies, newspaper articles, and films, Bejel maps out a fascinating argument about the way in which different attitudes toward power and nationalism struggle for an authoritative stance on homosexual issues. Through close readings of writers such as Jose Marti, Alfonso Hernandez-Cata, Carlos Montenegro, Jose...
With "Gay Cuban Nation," Emilio Bejel looks at Cuba's markedly homoerotic culture through writings about homosexuality, placing them in the social and...
This book is a critical study of visual representations of Jose Marti The National Hero of Cuba, and the discourses of power that make it possible for Marti's images to be perceived as icons today. It argues that an observer of Marti's icons who is immersed in the Cuban national narrative experiences a retrospective reconstruction of those images by means of ideologically formed national discourses of power. Also, the obsessive reproduction of Marti's icons signals a melancholia for the loss of the martyr-hero. But instead of attempting to "forget Marti," the book concludes that the utopian...
This book is a critical study of visual representations of Jose Marti The National Hero of Cuba, and the discourses of power that make it possible for...