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The Cuban Autonomist Movement's Perception of Canada, 1865-1898: Its Implication
The history of Cuba from the 1860s to 1898 has been written largely from the revolutionary, independentista perspective. It is a perspective that has been appealing to U.S. and Cuban historians alike, but it may well be a perspective that has distorted the Cuban political experience and made it more...
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Published in: | The Americas (Washington. 1944) 1992-04, Vol.48 (4), p.445-461 |
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container_end_page | 461 |
container_issue | 4 |
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container_title | The Americas (Washington. 1944) |
container_volume | 48 |
creator | Ogelsby, J.C.M. |
description | The history of Cuba from the 1860s to 1898 has been written largely from the revolutionary, independentista perspective. It is a perspective that has been appealing to U.S. and Cuban historians alike, but it may well be a perspective that has distorted the Cuban political experience and made it more difficult to understand the Cuban reality. That this perspective is alive and well can be seen in recent publications which give short shrift to the Cuban Autonomist movement, a movement that was essentially Cuban and whose leadership came from the largely urban, professional elite that rejected both annexation and independence. |
doi_str_mv | 10.2307/1006742 |
format | article |
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language | eng |
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source | JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection |
subjects | Colonies Conservatism Government Liberalism Political freedom Political parties Public administration Separatism United States history War |
title | The Cuban Autonomist Movement's Perception of Canada, 1865-1898: Its Implication |
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