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The Idea of Cuba
The Idea of Cuba
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List Price: $50.00
Buy New: $21.99
You Save: $28.01 (56%)
Buy New/Used from $21.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(based on 3 reviews)
Sales Rank: 115767
Category: Book

Author: Alex Harris
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
Studio: University of New Mexico Press
Manufacturer: University of New Mexico Press
Label: University of New Mexico Press
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 152
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7
Dimensions (in): 11.3 x 10.2 x 0.8

ISBN: 082634139X
Dewey Decimal Number: 972.91050222
EAN: 9780826341396
ASIN: 082634139X

Publication Date: July 16, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • I Was Cuba: Treasures from the Ramiro Fernandez Collection
  • Havana Then and Now (Then & Now)
  • Cuba Style: Graphics from the Golden Age of Design
  • Tastes Like Cuba: An Exile's Hunger for Home
  • Robert Polidori: Havana

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"Everyone seems to be waiting. A young woman in a pink shirt leans against a pillar. Two men sit on a stoop and look in her direction. Like most Havana streets, this one, Calle Zapatos in Santos Suarez, has seen better days. A glance reveals generations of faded paint, cracked plaster, and worn-down sidewalks. It's a curious kind of waiting--at once lethargic and restless--that I've become accustomed to in Cuba. Whatever is going to happen seems a long way off."--Alex HarrisThis remarkable journey into contemporary Cuba by photographer and writer Alex Harris is both a powerful and mysterious evocation of life on the island and an original meditation on the nature of documentary photography that reveals what Harris has learned over thirty-five years as a documentary photographer.

Like his mentor, Walker Evans, who photographed Cuba in 1933 at a pivotal political moment, Harris arrived in Cuba with his camera at a crossroads in Cuban history. Well known for over thirty-five years of photographic work in the Hispanic Southwest, Alaska, and the American South, Harris made three trips to Cuba to photograph a nation coming to grips with the economic and social devastation that followed the collapse of the socialist bloc in 1989, a nation beginning to imagine a future without Fidel Castro.

On each trip to Cuba, Harris used a different approach to peer deeper into the fabric of Cuban society. In the foreground of Harris's photographs and text are some of the archetypes of contemporary Cuban life: the indomitable 1950s American car, the beautiful young woman, and the revered revolutionary hero. Yet Harris recasts these symbols. We don't look at the car, but through it to consider the tangled relationship between Cuba and the United States. His portraits of young women challenge us to consider the nature of our gaze and to see the changing status of Cuban women in relation to Castro's political survival. The Cuban hero Jose Marti, a repeated icon in Harris?s photographs and the focus of his text, evokes Marti?s constant physical and spiritual presence for the Cuban people. Indeed, Marti is at the heart of this book, a visual and textual mantra giving us insight into the Cuban national character and helping us to understand what gives Cubans--on the island or in exile--their enduring strength and their hope for the future.

In her accompanying essay, Yale historian Lillian Guerra confronts the paradox of Cuba from a different perspective. An American daughter of Cuban exiles, she has visited the island repeatedly to conduct research and to try to understand what it means to be Cuban.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Full of memories   November 12, 2007
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Having been away from Cuba for more than 40 years, this book bring a lot of memories of my life there


2 out of 5 stars A Very Disappointing Idea   November 8, 2007
  1 out of 5 found this review helpful

The pictures of the old cars were beautifully depicted against the crumbling facade of buildings. However, all the cleavage shots negated that. This made me realize how sad and truly desperate the Cuban people, especially the women must be. I could find art in the picture as long as people weren't in the frame.


5 out of 5 stars beautiful/thoughtful/provocative   November 1, 2007
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

For anyone interested in the politics, economics and aesthetics... This book is a thoughtful look at the contemporary landscape of Cuba. The photographs are stunning.

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