Havana: A Cultural History - Paperback
SKU
9761566564191
ISBN
9781566564199

Havana: A Cultural History

$15.00
Author
Lightfoot, Claudia

From its humble birth as a few thatched huts along the shoreline, Havana has emerged from five hundred years of turbulent history as the most fascinating city in the Caribbean. Spainā€™s ā€œPearl of the Antillesā€ was in turn plundered by pirates, invaded by foreign fleets and then turned into a Mafia-run playground under U.S. tutelage. Since 1959 the seat of Fidel Castroā€™s revolutionary regime, Havana is now shaking off forty years of blockade to face the new challenges of mass tourism. A city whose fabric has always been threatened by hurricanes and political upheaval, Havana has developed a wild edge, an energy and an alluring exoticism that have intrigued and enchanted visitors as diverse as Alexander von Humboldt, Anais Nin, Lorca, and Sartre. Claudia Lightfoot explores Havanaā€™s history and its paradoxes: a city where architectural treasures survive among crumbling tenements; where a vibrant street life takes place amid shortages; where revolutionary politics, machismo, and a thriving black market co-exist against a background of salsa, griterĆ­a, and baseball. ā€¢ The city of architecture: fortresses, mansions, and Art Deco exuberance; baroque facades and balconies; an eclectic cityscape. ā€¢ The city of politics and exile: the colonial and neo-colonial years; wars, dictators, and revolution; JosĆ© MartĆ­ and Che Guevara; the diaspora and the dream of Miami. ā€¢ The city of literature, art, and music: Carpentier, Lezama Lima, and Cabrera Infante; passion and irony; Graham Greene and Hemingway; Wilfredo Lam and Nelson Dominguez; Afro-Cuban roots; salsa, rumba, son, and rap.

Binding*
Delivery*
8386