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Public Seminar and Book Launch: Cuba’s Cultural Policy
Public Seminar and Book Launch: Cuba’s Cultural Policy
6pm Thursday 22 October 2015
Room G37, Senate House,
University of London,
Malet St, London,WC1E 7HU
JOIN Rebecca Gordon-Nesbitt, author of the new book: To Defend the Revolution Is to Defend Culture: The Cultural Policy of the Cuban Revolution, for an evening of discussion and debate about the achievements of the Cuban revolution ion the cultural sphere.
Afterwards there will be an opportunity to buy copies at the discounted price of £15.00.
This event is organised in association with the Institute of Latin American Studies
Entrance is free but please register attendance with Olga Jimenez in advance: Olga.Jimenez@sas.ac.uk
To Defend the Revolution Is to Defend Culture: The Cultural Policy of the Cuban Revolution
Author: Rebecca Gordon-Nesbitt
• Foreword by Jorge Fornet
Publisher: PM Press
ISBN: 978-1-62963-104-2
$24.95/£17.99
Grounded in painstaking research, To Defend the Revolution Is to Defend Culture revisits the circumstances which led to the arts being embraced at the heart of the Cuban Revolution. Introducing the main protagonists to the debate, this previously untold story follows the polemical twists and turns that ensued in the volatile atmosphere of the 1960s and ’70s. The picture that emerges is of a struggle for dominance between Soviet-derived approaches and a uniquely Cuban response to the arts under socialism. The latter tendency, which eventually won out, was based on the principles of Marxist humanism. As such, this book foregrounds emancipatory understandings of culture.
To Defend the Revolution Is to Defend Culture takes its title from a slogan – devised by artists and writers at a meeting in October 1960 and adopted by the First National Congress of Writers and Artists the following August – which sought to highlight the intrinsic importance of culture to the Revolution. Departing from popular top-down conceptions of Cuban policy-formation, this book establishes the close involvement of the Cuban people in cultural processes and the contribution of Cuba’s artists and writers to the policy and praxis of the Revolution. Ample space is dedicated to discussions that remain hugely pertinent to those working in the cultural field, such as the relationship between art and ideology, engagement and autonomy, form and content. As the capitalist world struggles to articulate the value of the arts in anything other than economic terms, this book provides us with an entirely different way of thinking about culture and the policies underlying it.