Essential reading for those who increasingly appreciate the enormous importance of Mart? as one of the nineteenth centurys most influential and most original thinkers.John Kirk, coeditor of Redefining Cuban Foreign Policy
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Fountains wide-ranging, keen-eyed, and meticulously researched analysis covers the gamut of race relations that Mart?s work probed.Esther Allen, translator of Jos? Mart?: Selected Writings
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An engaging, comprehensive, and well-balanced book on Cubas national hero Jos? Mart?. Anne Fountains chapters on Mart?s vision of blacks are an indispensable source of information for anyone interested in the topic.Jorge Camacho, author of Jos? Mart?: las m?scaras del escritor
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A national hero in Cuba and a champion of independence across Latin America, Jos? Mart? produced a body of writing that has been theorized, criticized, and politicized. However, one of the most understudied aspects of his work is how his time in the United States affected what he wrote about race and his attitudes toward racial politics.
In the United States Mart? encountered European immigrants and the labor politics that accompanied them and became aware of the hardships experienced by Chinese workers. He read in newspapers and magazines about the oppression of Native Americans and the adversity faced by newly freed black citizens. Although hed first witnessed the mistreatment of slaves in Cuba, it was in New York City, near the close of the century, where he penned his famous essay My Race, declaring that there was only one race, the human race.
Anne Fountain argues that it was in the United States that Mart?confronted by the forces of manifest destiny, the influence of race in politics, the legacy of slavery, and the plight and promise of the black Cubanl%