Cuban Revolutionary Women

Authors

  • Aleia Guitan University of West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago

Keywords:

Cuban Revolution, Cecilia Sánchez Manduley, revolutionary women and guerrilla women.

Abstract

Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, Raul Castro and CamiloCienfuegos, these are the men whose images havealways been associated with the Cuban Guerilla groupwhich brought an end to the tyrannical leadership inCuba. Celia Sánchez Manduley a middle class Cuban biologist woman, distressed about thesocial and economic position of thepeasants under the Fulgencio Batista’sregime, initiated and nurtured guerrillawarfare in Sierra Maestra, determinedto bring an end to Batista, the Mafia andthe US government, who, she believedwas responsible for the rape and robberyof Cuban society. She took refuge in theSierra Mountains where she recruitedpeasants who were willing to put anend to the Batista tyranny. Those whowitnessed her plan, organize, strategizeand fight in the Sierras, believe her establishedrevolutionary movement wasthe foundation of the eventual successof “Castro’s Revolution”. The purposeof this paper is to highlight the work ofwomen in the success of the Cuban Revolution,which is seldom emphasized inhistory books or historical discussions.The time period chosen accounts forthe events that created a foundation fora successful revolution in which womenwere major pioneers.

Author Biography

Aleia Guitan, University of West Indies

Trinidad y Tobago. Maestranda del programa Maestría en Estudios Latinoamericanos con énfasis en Cultura y Desarrollo del IDELA, Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica.

References

Haney, Richard. (2005). Celia Sanchez. The

Legend of Cuba’s Revolutionary Heart.

New York, Algora Publishing.

Mathews, Herbert L. (1975). Revolution in

Cuba: an essay in understanding. New

York, Charles Scribner’s Sons.

Padula, Alfred and Smith, Lois M. (1996). Sex

and Revolution: Women in Socialist Cuba

New York, Oxford University Press, Inc.

Perez-Stable, Marifeli. (1994). The Cuban revo-

lution: origins, course, and legacy. New

York, Oxford University Press, Inc.

Randall, Margaret. (1974). Cuban Women

Now. Interviews with Cuban Women.

Toronto, Women’s Press Publications.

Randall, Margaret. (1981). Women in Cuba:

Twenty Years Later. New York, Smyrna

Press.

Santamaria, Celia. (2005). Haydee habla del

Moncada. New York, Ocean Press.

Shnookal, Deborah. (1991). Cuban women con-

front the future. Australia, Ocean Press.

Staten, Clifford (2003). The History of Cuba.

USA: Palgrave McMillan Press.

Stone, Elizabeth. (1981). Women and the

Cuban Revolution. New York, Pathfinder

Press.

Downloads

How to Cite

Cuban Revolutionary Women. (2013). Temas De Nuestra América Revista De Estudios Latinoamericanos, 27(50), 157-185. https://www.revistas.una.ac.cr/index.php/tdna/article/view/5528

Issue

Section

NUESTRA AMÉRICA EN FEMENINO (sección arbitrada)

How to Cite

Cuban Revolutionary Women. (2013). Temas De Nuestra América Revista De Estudios Latinoamericanos, 27(50), 157-185. https://www.revistas.una.ac.cr/index.php/tdna/article/view/5528

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 > >>