[NYTr] Photos reveal Cuba’s paradoxes, heroes, everyday life Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2007 18:05:16 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Progreso Weekly - Sep 20, 2007 http://progreso-weekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=155&Itemid=1 Photos reveal Cubabs paradoxes, heroes, and everyday life Legendary American photographer Walker Evans travelled to Cuba to document the waning days of dictator Gerardo Machado in the 1930s. His photos were published in Carleton Bealsb The Crime of Cuba, which garnered rave reviews in 1933. Sixty-five years later, Evansb student Alex Harris photographed Cuba in the waning days of Fidel Castro at a pivotal moment in Cubabs affairs with the U.S. What Harris documents in The Idea of Cuba co-published by the University of New Mexico Press and the Duke Center for Documentary Studies, is not only contemporary Cuba but also the idea of Cuba. Harrisb photographs reveal Cubabs history and heroism, the symbols of its culture, and gender issues on the island. Harris shows how Cuba preserves the ideals of utopian philosopher and intellectual JosC) MartC- -- despite a difficult history, political rigidity, and the dark shadow cast over the country by the U.S. As Harris worked, one theme emerged: change is slow. bCuba and the United States are stuck in old attitudes toward one another,b says Harris. bWhat do Americans really know about Cuba?b Harrisb images allow us to experience a Cuba apart from politics. Caribbean historian and Cuban Lillian Guerra of Yale, in her essay, bCubanidad,b writes about what is missing in Harrisbs work, compared to the work of other photographers of Cuba. bMissing are the predictable narratives of decaying societal structures, failing ideological foundations, and the anachronistic, exoticized panoramas,b Guerra says. Replacing these outmoded ideas in Harrisb portrayal are irony, collective memory, possessiveness, and pain that are the real protagonists in Cuba. The Idea of Cuba offers valuable insight into the Cuban national character so to better understand what gives Cubans their enduring strength and hope for the future. Not only an extraordinary body of photographic work, The Idea of Cuba also gets at what is essential and unique about the Cuban people: their struggles to create MartC-bs utopian society -- the bideab of Cuba. The Idea of Cuba is available at bookstores or directly from the University of New Mexico Press. To order, please call 800-249-7737 or visit http://www.unmpress.com Alex Harris is professor of documentary studies at Duke University and is a founder of the Center for Documentary Studies and DoubleTake magazine. He is author or editor of a dozen books, including River of Traps, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, written by William deBuys and published by the University of New Mexico Press. Lillian Guerra is assistant professor of Caribbean history at Yale University. She is the author of The Myth of JosC) MartC-: Conflicting Nationalism in Early Twentieth-Century Cuba (University of North Carolina Press.) * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================