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Current Issue #52
Vol 24, No. 1
For
texts of articles published within the past year, please contact us
(info@sdonline.org)
about buying a copy of the journal, or else
contact our publishers through their website: www.tandf.co.uk/journals
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Table of Contents
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52
(Volume 24, No. 1)
Cuban
Perspectives on Cuban Socialism
Preface
by
The Editors
Introduction, by Alfredo
Prieto
Rafael Hernández, Revolution/Reform and Other Cuban
Dilemmas
Juan Valdés Paz, Cuba: The Left in Government,
1959-2008
Emilio Duharte Díaz, Cuba at the Onset of the
21st Century: Socialism, Democracy, and Political Reforms
Omar Everleny Pérez Villanueva and Pavel
Vidal Alejandro, Cuba’s Economy: A Current Evaluation
and Several Necessary Proposals
Mayra Espina, Looking at Cuba Today: Four Assumptions
and Six Intertwined Problems
María del Carmen Zabala Argüelles, Poverty
and Vulnerability in Cuba Today
Marta Núñez Sarmiento, Cuban Development
Strategies and Gender Relations
Aurelio Alonso, Religion in Cuba’s Socialist
Transition
Rodrigo Espina Prieto and Pablo Rodríguez
Ruiz, Race and Inequality in Cuba Today
Notes on Contributors

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Notes on Contributors
Dagmar Barnouw (1936-2008) taught at the University
of Southern California from 1985 until her death. She was the author of
over 150 articles and 12 books, including studies of Hannah Arendt, Siegfried
Kracauer, and V. S. Naipaul, and, most recently, The War in the Empty
Air: Victims, Perpetrators, and Postwar Germans. Her husband Jeffrey
Barnouw, who revised her essay for publication, is a Professor of English
at the University of Texas at Austin. His most recent book is Odysseus,
Hero of Practical Intelligence: Deliberation and Signs in Homer's Odyssey.
<barnouw@yahoo.com>
Daniel Faber is a Professor of Sociology at Northeastern
University and Director of the Northeastern Environmental Justice Research
Collaborative. He is a co-founding editor of the journal Capitalism,
Nature, Socialism. His books include Environment Under Fire:
Imperialism and the Ecological Crisis in Central America (1993),
Capitalizing on Environmental Injustice: The Polluter-Industrial Complex
in the Age of Globalization (2008), and the edited collection, The
Struggle for Ecological Democracy: Environmental Justice Movements in
the United States (1998).
<dannyfaber@comcast.net>
Joseph Grim Feinberg is a PhD Candidate in anthropology
at the University of Chicago. In addition to working on his dissertation
about folk music and politics in Slovakia, he is preparing an anthology
of surrealist writings about folklore and is writing a book about the
20th century in the form of a fake collection of folktales from an unknown
place. He has published articles in such publications as Against the
Current, Industrial Worker, International Socialist
Review, ZNet, and the Slovak weekly Slovo.
<feinberg@uchicago.edu>
Roderick Graham is a doctoral student in sociology at
the City University of New York Graduate Center. His interests center
on the intersections between cultural consumption, race, and class. His
current research is on the cultural consumption of music and technology
in the United States. <rgraham1@gc.cuny.edu>
Frigga Haug is a leading Marxist-feminist theorist. Her
recent books (in German) include “Relations of Learning,”
“Rosa Luxemburg and the Art of Politics,” and “The Politics
Surrounding the Headscarf Debate.” <friggahaug@inkrit.org>
Colette Inez has published nine books of poetry and has
won Guggenheim, Rockefeller, two NEA fellowships and two Pushcart Prizes.
She is widely anthologized and teaches in Columbia University's Undergraduate
Writing Program. Her memoir The Secret of M. Dulong was released
by the University of Wisconsin Press in 2005. <ci1@columbia.edu>
George Katsiaficas is living in Gwangju, South Korea,
where he is finishing a book on East Asian uprisings in the last few decades
-– a final part of the trilogy that includes his previous books
on the global imagination of 1968 and European autonomous movements after
1968. He recently interviewed activists on the Burmese-Thai border. <katsiaficasg@wit.edu>
Philip
Metres’ most recent poems are collected in To See the
Earth and in Come Together: Imagine Peace (both 2008). He is also
the author of Behind the Lines: War Resistance Poetry on the American
Homefront Since 1941 (2007). His poetry has appeared in numerous
journals and anthologies, including Best American Poetry and Inclined
to Speak: Contemporary Arab American Poetry. He teaches literature
and creative writing at John Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio. <pmetres@jcu.edu>
Alicia Ostriker has published eleven books of poetry;
her poetry has been widely anthologized and has been translated into French,
German, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew and Arabic. Her critical work
includes Stealing the Language: The Emergence of Women’s Poetry
in America and For the Love of God: The Bible as an Open Book.
She is a Professor Emerita at Rutgers University, and currently teaches
in the low-residency Poetry MFA program of New England College. <www.rci.rutgers.edu/~ostriker/home.htm>
Jonathan Scott is the author of Socialist Joy in
the Writing of Langston Hughes, and a professor of writing and literature
at Bronx Community College. <jonascott15@aol.com>
David Strug is Professor of Social Work at the Wurzweiler
School of Social Work at Yeshiva University in New York City and is also
a clinical social worker in private practice. He has traveled frequently
to Cuba, where he has studied community-oriented health care and the development
of social work. He is presently co-editing Community Health Care in
Cuba: An Enduring Model.
<strug@yu.edu>
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