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Cubans and the Caribbean South: Race, Labor, and Cuban Identity in Southern Florida, 1868--1928

机译:古巴人和加勒比南部地区:南佛罗里达州的种族,劳工和古巴身份,1868--1928年

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摘要

This dissertation looks at the Cuban cigar making communities of Key West and Ybor City (in present-day Tampa) from 1868 to 1928. During this period, both cities represented two of largest Cuban exile centers and played critical roles in the Cuban independence movement and the Clear Havana cigar industry. I am charting how these communities wrestled with race, labor politics, and their own Cuban identity. Broadly speaking, my project makes contributions to the literature on Cuban history, Latino history, and transnational studies.;My narrative is broken into two chronological periods. The earlier period (1868--1898) looks at Southern Florida and Cuba as a permeable region where ideas, people, and goods flowed freely. I am showing how Southern Florida was constructed as an extension of Cuba and that workers were part of broader networks tied to Cuban nationalism and Caribbean radicalism. Borne out of Cuba's independence struggles, both communities created a political and literary atmosphere that argued for an egalitarian view of a new republic. Concurrently, workers began to experiment with labor organizing. Cigar workers at first tried to reconcile the concepts of nationalism and working-class institutions, but there was considerable friction between the two ideas. Influenced by Spanish anarchism, many cigar workers began to identify the limits of Cuban nationalism and instead argued for a working-class internationalism.;The second period (1898--1928) examines how union busting and Jim Crow segregation greatly weakened the Cuban communities of Southern Florida. After the Cuban War of Independence, Cubans in Southern Florida built their most ambitious labor unions. However, manufacturers and city officials used intimidation and vigilantism to break up local unions. At the same time, I show how Jim Crow discrimination became a central facet of both communities. Mutual-aid societies, Cuban schools, and other cultural spaces became segregated. In the process, Cubans of color had to create their own institutions to support themselves. Black Cubans became ostracized during this period and were forced into communities with African Americans. Conversely, I explore how white Cubans used their race to better their positions in Florida society and become Cuban Americans.
机译:本文着眼于1868年至1928年基韦斯特岛和伊博尔市(今坦帕市)的古巴雪茄制造社区。在此期间,这两个城市代表了古巴最大的两个流放中心,并在古巴独立运动和透明的哈瓦那雪茄业。我正在绘制这些社区如何与种族,劳工政治和他们自己的古巴身份作斗争的图表。从广义上讲,我的项目为有关古巴历史,拉丁裔历史和跨国研究的文献做出了贡献。我的叙述分为两个按时间顺序排列的时期。较早的时期(1868--1898年)将佛罗里达南部和古巴视为一个思想,人员和物品自由流通的通透区域。我正在展示佛罗里达州南部是如何作为古巴的延伸而建的,而工人是与古巴民族主义和加勒比激进主义联系在一起的更广泛网络的一部分。这两个族裔出生于古巴的独立斗争中,营造了一种政治和文学氛围,主张对新共和国实行平等主义观点。同时,工人开始尝试劳动组织。雪茄工人起初试图调和民族主义和工人阶级制度的概念,但两者之间存在很大的摩擦。在西班牙无政府主义的影响下,许多雪茄工人开始发现古巴民族主义的局限性,而开始主张工人阶级国际主义。佛罗里达州南部。古巴独立战争后,佛罗里达州南部的古巴人建立了最雄心勃勃的工会。但是,制造商和城市官员利用恐吓和警惕打散了当地的工会。同时,我展示了吉姆·克劳(Jim Crow)的歧视是如何成为两个社区的中心方面。互助社会,古巴学校和其他文化空间被隔离了。在此过程中,有色古巴人必须建立自己的机构以维持生计。在此期间,黑人古巴人被排斥在外,被迫与非洲裔美国人一起进入社区。相反,我探索了白人古巴人如何利用自己的种族来改善自己在佛罗里达社会的地位并成为古巴裔美国人。

著录项

  • 作者

    Gomez, Andrew.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Los Angeles.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Los Angeles.;
  • 学科 American history.;Latin American history.;Hispanic American studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2015
  • 页码 249 p.
  • 总页数 249
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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