Maria de los Reyes Castillo Bueno (1902 1997), a black woman known as Reyita, recounts her life in Cuba over the span of ninety years. Reyita s voice is at once dignified, warm, defiant, strong, poetic, principled, and intelligent. Her story as told to and recorded by her daughter Daisy Castillo begins in Africa with her own grandmother s abduction by slave-traders and continues through a century of experiences with prejudice, struggle, and change in Cuba for Reyita and her numerous family members. Sensitive to and deeply knowledgeable of the systemic causes and consequences of poverty,...
Maria de los Reyes Castillo Bueno (1902 1997), a black woman known as Reyita, recounts her life in Cuba over the span of ninety years. Reyita s voice ...
In "Myths of Modernity," Elizabeth Dore rethinks Nicaragua's transition to capitalism. Arguing against the idea that the country's capitalist transformation was ushered in by the coffee boom that extended from 1870 to 1930, she maintains that coffee growing gave rise to systems of landowning and labor exploitation that impeded rather than promoted capitalist development. Dore places gender at the forefront of her analysis, which demonstrates that patriarchy was the organizing principle of the coffee economy's debt-peonage system until the 1950s. She examines the gendered dynamics of daily...
In "Myths of Modernity," Elizabeth Dore rethinks Nicaragua's transition to capitalism. Arguing against the idea that the country's capitalist transfor...
In "Myths of Modernity," Elizabeth Dore rethinks Nicaragua's transition to capitalism. Arguing against the idea that the country's capitalist transformation was ushered in by the coffee boom that extended from 1870 to 1930, she maintains that coffee growing gave rise to systems of landowning and labor exploitation that impeded rather than promoted capitalist development. Dore places gender at the forefront of her analysis, which demonstrates that patriarchy was the organizing principle of the coffee economy's debt-peonage system until the 1950s. She examines the gendered dynamics of daily...
In "Myths of Modernity," Elizabeth Dore rethinks Nicaragua's transition to capitalism. Arguing against the idea that the country's capitalist transfor...