Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00026 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00055 | Partager |
Colored pencil drawing of skeletal rafter at sea being blown by Fidel Castro with razor wire and Uncle Sam Résumé : (Ownership) Received by the Rubenstein Library as a gift from Mariela Ferrer Jewett in 2010 Many of the drawings created by Cubans in the camps in 1994 showed rafters caught between Presidents Fidel Castro and Bill Clinton. | Partager Voir aussi |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1980s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico, where she died. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00004 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00028 | Partager |
L’alternative au modèle socialiste cubain actuel : des Lineamientos du VIe Congrès du Parti aux perspectives d’intensification des relations avec l’Union Européenne Auteur(s) : Mixhe, Jessica Éditeur(s) : Université des Antilles Études caribéennes Résumé : Avril 2011. L’agitation dans les rues est le signe qu’un événement capital pour l’avenir du pays se prépare : Raoul Castro a convoqué la réunion du 6e congrès du Parti Communiste Cubain. Après des années de revendication d’un système social égalitaire échappant à la tutelle étasunienne, les structures économiques de la perle des Caraïbes sont remises en question. L’arrivée des printemps arabes, qui symbolisent la révolte des peuples vis-à-vis d’une gouvernance politique et économique autoritaire et rigide, n’est probablement pas étrangère à ce soudain besoin de modifier les structures économiques existantes à Cuba. Au menu, ce sont 291 mesures qui sont annoncées pour améliorer le quotidien des cubains, dont le salaire moyen mensuel est de 12 euros. Quant à la relation qu’entretient Cuba avec l’UE, elle revêt aujourd’hui une dimension surtout bilatérale : la position commune de 1996 n’a en effet jamais été modifiée, les Etats Membres adoptant une attitude différente selon les relations qu’ils entretiennent avec Cuba, tant d’un point de vue politique qu’historique. April, 2011. The excitement in streets is the sign that a major event for the future of the country gets ready: Raoul Castro convened the meeting of the 6th congress of the Cuban Communist Party. After years of defending an equalitarian social system escaping the American guardianship, the economic structures of the pearl of Caribbean islands are questioned. The arrival of Arab Springs, which symbolize the revolt of the peoples towards authoritarian and stiff political and economic governance, is most probably linked to this sudden need to modify the economic structures existing in Cuba. To the menu, 291 measures are announced to improve the everyday life of Cubans, the monthly average wage of which is 12 euro. As for the relation which maintains Cuba with the EU, it takes on an especially bilateral dimension today: the common position of 1996 was modified indeed never, Member States adopting a different attitude according to the relations which they maintain with Cuba, from a political point of view as well as from a historic one. Abril de 2011. La agitación en las calles testimonia que un evento capital para el futuro del país está preparándose: Raúl Castro convoco la reunión del 6to congreso del Partido Comunista Cubano. Después de anos reivindicando un sistema social igualitario que escapó a la tutela estadounidense, las estructuras económicas de la perla del Caribe están siendo cuestionadas. La llegada de las primaveras árabes, símbolo de la rebelión de los pueblos frente de una gobernanza política y económica autoritaria y rígida, probablemente no es ajena extranjera a esta necesidad súbita de modificar las estructuras económicas existentes en Cuba. Como parte del programa, 291 medidas son anunciadas para mejorar la vida diaria del cubano, cuyo salario medio mensual es de 12 euros. En cuanto a la relación que tiene Cuba con la UE, reviste hoy una dimensión sobre todo bilateral: en efecto, la posición común de 1996 no ha sido modificada, dado que los Estados Miembros adoptan una actitud diferente según las relaciones que mantienen) con Cuba, tanto desde un punto de vista político como histórico. Cuba Martinique Droits : info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess urn:doi:10.4000/etudescaribeennes.6297 http://journals.openedition.org/etudescaribeennes/6297 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00034 | Partager |
José M. Cortina Extrait de : Proceso histórico de la enmienda Platt (1897-1934) (p. 448 bis) Résumé : Photographie de Jose Manuel Cortina y Garcia (1880-1970), homme politique, avocat et journaliste cubain. Participa à la rédaction de la constitution de Cuba de 1940, fut ministre de Batista entre 1940 et 1942. Ses terres et propriétés furent confisquées par le régime de Fidel Castro. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 20 Droits : Domaine public Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/images/IHE140230537i1 IHE140230537i1 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00061 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00045 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso, PDF of all images Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00002 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00036 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00039 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00046 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00023 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00043 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00056 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00063 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00027 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00044 | Partager |