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Writing as a Weapon and Translation as Decolonization: Revolutionary Collaborations Writing as a Weapon and Translation as Decolonization: Revolutionary Collaborations
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“What Is This ‘Black’ in Latinx Popular Culture?” “What Is This ‘Black’ in Latinx Popular Culture?”
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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12 Listening to Our New Possessions: Music and Imperial Writings on Puerto Rico and Cuba, 1898–1920s
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7 Puerto Rico en Areíto: Translation, Ethnic and Cultural Studies, and Other Collaborations among Cuban and Puerto Rican Migrant Intellectuals
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Published:February 2023
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Abstract
Laura Lomas underscores the long tradition of solidarity in the struggle for Puerto Rico and Cuba’s independence. Lomas focuses on the cultural and political significance of Areíto,the most widely circulated magazine of the progressive Cuban and Latin American diaspora during the 1970s and early 1980s. The magazine,founded by the New York–based Afro-Cuban Lourdes Casal and others, expressed a version of latinidad that endorsed national self-determination and decolonization. This chapter reflects on the practice and representation of collaboration among Cubans and Puerto Ricans in Areíto to grasp how twentieth-century projects built upon and transformed nineteenth-century modes of solidarity within the struggle for Cuban and Puerto Rican independence.
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