In the tumultuous first decade of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro and other leaders saturated the media with altruistic images of themselves in a campaign to win the hearts of Cuba's six million citizens. In Visions of Power in Cuba, Lillian Guerra argues that these visual representations explained rapidly occurring events and encouraged radical change and mutual self-sacrifice.
Mass rallies and labor mobilizations of unprecedented scale produced tangible evidence of what Fidel Castro called "unanimous support" for a revolution whose "moral power" defied U.S. control. Yet participation in state-orchestrated spectacles quickly became a requirement for political inclusion in a new Cuba that policed most forms of dissent. Devoted revolutionaries who resisted disastrous economic policies, exposed post-1959 racism, and challenged gender norms set by Cuba's one-party state increasingly found themselves marginalized, silenced, or jailed. Using previously unexplored sources, Guerra focuses on the lived experiences of citizens, including peasants, intellectuals, former prostitutes, black activists, and filmmakers, as they struggled to author their own scripts of revolution by resisting repression, defying state-imposed boundaries, and working for anti-imperial redemption in a truly free Cuba.
| Sobre o Livro |
Desmonta os mecanismos visuais e políticos da Revolução Cubana, revelando como imagens e narrativas oficiais construíram um projeto de poder durante a década inicial de Fidel Castro. Investiga as experiências de cidadãos comuns - camponeses, intelectuais, ativistas negros - que resistiram às fronteiras impostas pelo estado revolucionário, expondo as tensões internas do processo revolucionário. Oferece um olhar crítico sobre os bastidores da mobilização política cubana, explorando como espetáculos de massa transformaram participação em requisito de inclusão e controle social.
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