Browse Title - 4 results
Adela azcuy, la capitana: Trabajo leído por el Académico Correspondiente en Artemisa, Provincia de Pinar del Río, Sr. Armando Guerra Cast...
written by Armando Guerra Casteñeda, fl. 1950, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1950, originally published 1950), 40 page(s)
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of...
Sample
written by Armando Guerra Casteñeda, fl. 1950, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1950, originally published 1950), 40 page(s)
Description
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of ma...
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of malnutrition in the prison camps and in prisons. They sent their children to war. The national narrative used the manner by which women sacrificed their lives and those of their family members to signify the ultimate rendering of the Cuban soul for freedom. The speeches given in academic setting 50 years after Cuba was independent from Spain retained the passion of the independence and molded images of female martyrs into the official historical record. These are only a few of those speeches delivered in the 1950s.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Biography
Author / Creator
Armando Guerra Casteñeda, fl. 1950
Date Published / Released
1950
Publisher
Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Person Discussed
Adela Azcuy, 1861-1914
Topic / Theme
Cuban War of Independence, 1895-1898, Women, Colonization, Empire, and Post Coloniality, Opposition to Imperialism, Cubans, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
Copyright Message
Copyright @ 1950 Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Archive Collection / Provenance
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
Sections
Archive Collection / Provenance:
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
×
La ciudad de marta y marta de la ciudad: Trabajo leído por el Académico Correspondiente en Barcelona, España, Sr. Rafael Marquina y Angul...
written by Rafael Marquina y Angulo, 1887-1960, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1950, originally published 1950), 64 page(s)
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of...
Sample
written by Rafael Marquina y Angulo, 1887-1960, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1950, originally published 1950), 64 page(s)
Description
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of ma...
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of malnutrition in the prison camps and in prisons. They sent their children to war. The national narrative used the manner by which women sacrificed their lives and those of their family members to signify the ultimate rendering of the Cuban soul for freedom. The speeches given in academic setting 50 years after Cuba was independent from Spain retained the passion of the independence and molded images of female martyrs into the official historical record. These are only a few of those speeches delivered in the 1950s.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Biography
Author / Creator
Rafael Marquina y Angulo, 1887-1960
Date Published / Released
1950
Publisher
Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Person Discussed
Marta Abreu, 1845-1909
Topic / Theme
Women, Colonization, Empire, and Post Coloniality, Opposition to Imperialism, Cubans, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
Copyright Message
Copyright @ 1950 Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Archive Collection / Provenance
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
Sections
Archive Collection / Provenance:
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
×
Edelmira Guerra 'Esperanza del Valle' (Una de las más valiosas auxiliares en la guerra del 95): Trabajo de ingreso leído por el Sr. Robert...
written by Roberto Pérez de Acevedo, 1901-, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1953, originally published 1953), 36 page(s)
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of...
Sample
written by Roberto Pérez de Acevedo, 1901-, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1953, originally published 1953), 36 page(s)
Description
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of ma...
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of malnutrition in the prison camps and in prisons. They sent their children to war. The national narrative used the manner by which women sacrificed their lives and those of their family members to signify the ultimate rendering of the Cuban soul for freedom. The speeches given in academic setting 50 years after Cuba was independent from Spain retained the passion of the independence and molded images of female martyrs into the official historical record. These are only a few of those speeches delivered in the 1950s.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Biography
Author / Creator
Roberto Pérez de Acevedo, 1901-
Date Published / Released
1953
Publisher
Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Person Discussed
Edelmira Guerra de Dauval, 1868-1908
Topic / Theme
Political and Human Rights, Social Reform and Political Activism, Equal Rights for Women, Socialism, Cubans, Industrialization and Western Global Hegemony (1750–1914)
Archive Collection / Provenance
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
Sections
Archive Collection / Provenance:
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
×
Maria Luisa Dolz, educadora y ciudadana: Discurso leído por el Académico de Número Prof. Manuel I. Mesa Rodriquez en sesión pública cel...
written by Manuel I. Mesa Rodriguez, 1894-, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1954, originally published 1954), 26 page(s)
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of...
Sample
written by Manuel I. Mesa Rodriguez, 1894-, in Lynn Stoner Personal Collection, of Private Collection (Havana City: Academia de la Historia de Cuba, 1954, originally published 1954), 26 page(s)
Description
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of ma...
From the beginning of the republic, Cuban historians gathered and glorified national history in speeches before an academic audience. They mostly spoke of patriots and battles, but a basic element of Cuban national identity was martyrdom. Cuban patriots fought and died for a total of fourteen years. Their form of resistance was guerrilla warfare, and soldiers relied on women to fight, spy, run guns, and nurse the wounded and ill. Women died of malnutrition in the prison camps and in prisons. They sent their children to war. The national narrative used the manner by which women sacrificed their lives and those of their family members to signify the ultimate rendering of the Cuban soul for freedom. The speeches given in academic setting 50 years after Cuba was independent from Spain retained the passion of the independence and molded images of female martyrs into the official historical record. These are only a few of those speeches delivered in the 1950s.
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Collection
Women and Social Movements, Modern Empires Since 1820
Field of Study
Women and Social Movements
Content Type
Biography
Author / Creator
Manuel I. Mesa Rodriguez, 1894-
Date Published / Released
1954
Publisher
Academia de la Historia de Cuba
Person Discussed
Maria Luisa Dolz, 1854-1928
Topic / Theme
Social Reform and Political Activism, Women and Education, Socialism, Women as Teachers, Cubans, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Archive Collection / Provenance
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
Sections
Archive Collection / Provenance:
Lynn Stoner Personal Collection
×