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9780813948140 Academic Inspection Copy

The Epic of Cuba Libre

The Mambi, Mythopoetics, and Liberation
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Between 1868 and 1898, three generations of Cubans fought to free Cuba from colonialist Spain. More than a century later, no other historical narrative is as beloved and ritualistically recited as the story of Cuba Libre and the citizen-soldier known as the mambi. In town festivals and cartoons, in textbooks and hymns, in the national currency and logos alike, the mambi is the foremost icon of Cuba's past and present. Scrutinizing how this figure has been aesthetically rendered in literature, historiography, cinema, and monuments, Eric Morales-Franceschini teases out the emancipatory promises that the story of Cuba Libre came to embody in the twentieth-century popular imagination.The story of Cuba Libre and the mambi is not, after all, a conventional epic. For how does one account for heroes that are neither demigods nor nobles? For tactics more sly than virtuous? Or verse more populist than eloquent? Analyzing the mambi as Afro-Cuban, woman, trickster, saboteur, and martyr, this critical exegesis shows how that heroic archetype has come to bear on issues such as racial justice, women's empowerment, populist humor, the ethics of violence, and the nationalist sublime. With an eye toward decolonial futures, The Epic of Cuba Libre illuminates the complexities and idiosyncrasies of an aesthetics of liberation.
Eric Morales-Franceschini is Assistant Professor of English and Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the University of Georgia.
A beautifully written, highly original, and exciting study of the iconography of the mambi and corresponding national narrative of Cuba Libre. --Anne Garland Mahler, University of Virginia, author of From the Tricontinental to the Global South: Race, Radicalism, and Transnational Solidarity
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