Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora : : Setting the Tent Against the House / / Andrea O’Reilly Herrera.

As an island—a geographical space with mutable and porous borders—Cuba has never been a fixed cultural, political, or geographical entity. Migration and exile have always informed the Cuban experience, and loss and displacement have figured as central preoccupations among Cuban artists and intellect...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Texas Press eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2013
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Place / Publishing House:Austin : : University of Texas Press, , [2021]
©2011
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource
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245 1 0 |a Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora :  |b Setting the Tent Against the House /  |c Andrea O’Reilly Herrera. 
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505 0 0 |t Frontmatter --   |t Contents --   |t Acknowledgments --   |t For the Cuban Dead --   |t Café cubano à la Grisel --   |t Introduction: Setting the Tent Against the House --   |t Chapter one. Cuban Cultural Expression On and Off the Island. The Condition of “Un-Freedom --   |t Chapter two. Repeating the Unrepeatable: CAFÉ and the Journeys of Cuban Artists --   |t Chapter three. Mapmaking in Diaspora: A Crumb of Madeleine --   |t Chapter four. CAFÉ and the Cuban Modernist Movement --   |t Chapter five. Seams of Continuity: The Landscape of the Dispossessed --   |t Chapter six. The Architecture of Longing and Remembrance --   |t Chapter seven. The Trope of Displacement, the Disruption of Space --   |t Chapter eight. Discourses of Positionality --   |t The Stranger --   |t Epilogue. Cuba: A Work-in-Progress --   |t Appendix A --   |t Appendix B --   |t Notes --   |t List of Illustrations 
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520 |a As an island—a geographical space with mutable and porous borders—Cuba has never been a fixed cultural, political, or geographical entity. Migration and exile have always informed the Cuban experience, and loss and displacement have figured as central preoccupations among Cuban artists and intellectuals. A major expression of this experience is the unconventional, multi-generational, itinerant, and ongoing art exhibit CAFÉ: The Journeys of Cuban Artists. In Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora, Andrea O'Reilly Herrera focuses on the CAFÉ project to explore Cuba's long and turbulent history of movement and rupture from the perspective of its visual arts and to meditate upon the manner in which one reconstitutes and reinvents the self in the context of diaspora. Approaching the Cafeteros' art from a cultural studies perspective, O'Reilly Herrera examines how the history of Cuba informs their work and establishes their connections to past generations of Cuban artists. In interviews with more than thirty artists, including José Bedia, María Brito, Leandro Soto, Glexis Novoa, Baruj Salinas, and Ana Albertina Delgado, O'Reilly Herrera also raises critical questions regarding the many and sometimes paradoxical ways diasporic subjects self-affiliate or situate themselves in the narratives of scattering and displacement. She demonstrates how the Cafeteros' artmaking involves a process of re-rooting, absorption, translation, and synthesis that simultaneously conserves a series of identifiable Cuban cultural elements while re-inscribing and transforming them in new contexts. An important contribution to both diasporic and transnational studies and discussions of contemporary Cuban art, Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora ultimately testifies to the fact that a long tradition of Cuban art is indeed flourishing outside the island. 
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