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Cuba beyond the Beach

Stories of Life in Havana

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Havana is Cuba's soul: a mix of Third World, First World, and Other World. After over a decade of visits as a teacher, researcher, and friend, Karen Dubinsky looks past political slogans and tourist postcards to the streets, neighbourhoods, and personalities of a complicated and contradictory city. Her affectionate, humorous vignettes illustrate how Havana's residents—old Communist ladies, their sceptical offspring, musicians, underground vendors, entrepreneurial landlords, and poverty-stricken professors—go about their daily lives.

As Cuba undergoes dramatic change, there is much to appreciate, and learn from, in the unlikely world Cubans have collectively built for themselves.

A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this book will go to the Queen's University Student Overseas Travel Fund—The Sonia Enjamio Fund, which funds Cuban/Canadian student exchange.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 20, 2017
      Dubinsky, a Canadian professor of history at Queen’s University and coauthor of My Havana: The Musical City of Carlos Varela, gives readers a balanced and clear-eyed portrait of everyday life for citizens in the Cuban capital. She examines the effects of Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution, the U.S. blockade, and recent developments such as the economic reforms introduced by Raúl Castro in 2010 and the 2014 normalization of relations with the U.S. Dubinsky lived in Havana for extended periods, and writes knowledgeably about problems Cubans face, including long queues at shops, shortages of food, and the lack of safe, affordable housing. She also introduces readers to the cultural richness of Havana’s neighborhoods and resources such as the Cuban Art Factory, a combined art gallery, performance space, dance club, theater, and art market. She devotes a chapter to Cuban music, praising Carlos Varela as both a singer and a historian: “Good musicians can be great historians because they take us places that only the poets go.” This is an intimate portrait of Havana, enriched by Dubinsky’s personal anecdotes and stories of her Cuban friends. It chronicles the resourcefulness and resilience of the Cuban people and will appeal broadly to anyone traveling to Cuba or readers who just want to be transported there.

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  • English

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