Archive for May 3rd, 2012
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“Hay un son, hay un flow, hay un son que se oye en Habana” words that will be forever engrained in our memories as the theme song to our experience in Cuba. Hay un son by Orishas must have played over a dozen times on our trip, enough times for us to begin to understand […]
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Even before the two-week trip to Cuba, I knew that baseball was more than just a game to Cubans. I’d heard, for example, about the tradition of Cuban men to gather in parks and public squares to have intense debates (which might, I was warned, appear to my eyes as shouting matches) all about baseball. […]
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“Priceless libraries created over generations and libraries knocked together by upstarts; libraries specializing in the most profound, unusual themes and libraries made from birthday presents and wedding anniversaries — were all cruelly sacrificed by their owners on the pagan altar of financial necessity suddenly felt by the inhabitants of country were the shadow of death […]
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There’s perhaps no greater insignia of tourism than the camera. The stereotypical image of any tourist, regardless of country and culture, invariably includes a camera hanging from a neck or firmly grasped in hand. Today, the first thing we do upon arrival in a new country – after we’ve located our luggage and potentially the […]
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During our second stay in Havana I made a trip to the University of Havana with a few other students from the group to conduct interviews with students there about our research topics. It was the first time that I had entered the campus, though we had passed its towering staircase with the Alma Mater […]
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The most interesting part about being in Cuba, by and large, was that after writing a thesis about tourism and Cuba in the 1990s, it was incredibly interesting to see how much research applied to the current situation in Cuba. Two certain themes come to mind when thinking of how my research applies to Cuba […]
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When we visited Cuba, some of us had the opportunity to see a performance by the National Cuban Ballet. The performance of Copelia was spectacular. I am not a dancer. I am not a Cuban citizen. I am not of Cuban descent. Even though I am not any of these things, that does not mean […]
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“…all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness…That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, […]
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When the Revolutionary government took control of Cuba in 1959, an important part of their campaign to consolidate power was changing the way the population thought. This became especially important after 1961 when the Revolution was declared socialist, and the government made a concerted effort to move away from the pro-capitalist thought that was so […]
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When today’s generation thinks Communism, we tend to think Soviet Russia. Grey streets, repressed people, cold wars, doomed planning. From our seats in high school history class, full of boredom and angst, we’re taught that the Communist system was a) Destined To Fail and b) Responsible for Plunging the World into the Longest Continuous State […]
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