“Although I was familiar with various of the anecdotes and testimonies, I found <i>Clandestinas</i> impossible to put down. It reads like a novel! <b>Carolee Bengelsdorf</b>’s book is of the utmost importance to those wanting to approach Cuban history from the perspective of the real participation of women insurrectionists and how their contributions have been silenced not only in Cuba but in Latin America as well. Bengelsdorf has crafted an incredibly brave and compelling account of the women in clandestinidad.” - <b>Margarita Mateo Palmer</b>, Cuban critic, essayist, and novelist <br /> <br />“<i>Clandestinas</i> is rich with detail and filled with insight into the public lives and private experiences of women who immersed themselves into the multiple and multifaceted perils associated with political resistance. Subverting the premise that the success of the Cuban revolution was an achievement principally of men, <b>Carollee Bengelsdorf</b> provides a compelling and much-needed counternarrative to what has settled into a conventional account. This impressive book will make a decisive contribution to a deeper understanding of the complexities of the Cuban revolutionary war and its aftermath.” - <b>Louis A. Pérez Jr.</b>, author of <i>Colonial Reckoning: Race and Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Cuba</i>
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
1. Batista’s Quest for Legitimacy 21
2. Disrupting the Narrative: The Frento CÍvico de Mujeres Martianas 30
3. Male Bonding: The Sierra Versus the Llano 57
4. The Clandestinas: Why They Were, Who They Were, How They Were 81
5. Clandestinas in Havana: What They Did 105
6. The Uses of Torture 128
7. Aftermaths: Forgetting and Remembering 152
8. Children 166
Epilogue: AmÉrica Domitro 177
Clandestinas: A Visual Essay / Compiled by Susan Meiselas 179
Notes 231
Bibliography 261
Index 275
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Carollee Bengelsdorf is Professor Emerita of Politics and Critical Social Inquiry at Hampshire College, author of The Problem of Democracy in Cuba: Between Vision and Reality, and coeditor of The Selected Writings of Eqbal Ahmad.Susan Meiselas is a documentary photographer and MacArthur Fellow who has covered human rights issues in Latin America.