| The following researchers are affiliated to the Caribbean Studies Centre as Associate Fellows:
Alberto Abello Jeannette Allsopp Erna Brodber Mary Chamberlain Merle Collins Camillia Cowling Juanita Cox Jonathan Curry-Machado Richard Drayton Evelyn Fishburn Peter Fraser Humberto García Muñiz Jorge Giovannetti Norman Girvan Gad Heuman Annette Insanally Anthony Maingot Pedro Pérez Sarduy Marika Preziuso Brinsley Samaroo Jean Stubbs
Alberto Abello
Currently Dean of the Faculty of Economic and Administrative Sciences, Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar (Cartagena de las Indias, Colombia). Between 1997 and 2004 he was the Director of the Observatorio del Caribe Colombiano. His recent research has included a study of the quality of life in the San Andrés archipelago, and youth participation in Caribbean drug trafficking; developing a regional strategy for science and technology in the Colombian Caribbean; and a study of the impact of globalisation on the economy of Cartagena.
His publications include:
La región y la economía mundial, Bogotá: Cedetrabajo, 1997
El Caribe colombiano, la realidad regional al final del siglo XX, with Cecilia López Montaño, Observatorio del Caribe colombiano, Tercer Mundo, 1998
La costa que queremos, reflexiones sobre el Caribe colombiano en el umbral del 2000, with Cecilia López Montaño, Universidad del Atlántico, Observatorio del Caribe Colombiano, 1998
Estructura industrial del Caribe colombiano (1974-1996), Observatorio del Caribe Colombiano, 2000
Poblamiento y ciudades del Caribe colombiano, with Silvana Giaimo, Observatorio del Caribe Colombiano, 2000
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Jeannette Allsopp
Caribbean linguist and lexicographer, currently based at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill campus, Barbados. She established the Antillean Multilingual Research Centre in 1997, and is the founding editor of Ideas, the Journal of the Barbados Association of Foreign Language Teachers. She was awarded an honorary doctorate by London Metropolitan University in 2004.
Her publications include:
'The Caribbean Multilingual Lexicography Project: Compiling a comprehensive dictionary for a polyglot region', English Today, 77 (Jan 2004)
'Caribbean Folk Medicine and Caribbean Languages', Shabeau (Jan 2004)
The Caribbean Multilingual Dictionary of Flora, Fauna and Foods, in English, French, French Creole and Spanish, Jamaica: Arawak Publications, 2003
Erna Brodber While perhaps best known as a novelist, Jamaican writer Erna Brodber has also been a lecturer in social sciences, most recently in the University of the West Indies at Mona, and previously as a Fellow of the Institute of Social and Economic Research, where she worked collecting oral histories of elders in rural Jamaica - something that subsequently inspired her fictional writing. Her novels deal with the healing power of the community, in which female protagonists struggle to understand the past (through their historical lineage), and the present (through their ambiguous roles in the community). The need to accept diversity and link apparently opposing groups (white and black, rich and poor) commonly appears in Brodber's work.
Her publications include: Louisiana, New Beacon Books, 1997 (fiction)
Myal, New Beacon Books, 1988 (fiction)
Jane and Louisa will soon come home, New Beacon Books, 1980 (fiction)
The Second Generation of Free Men in Jamaica, 1907-1944, University Press of Florida, 2004
The Continent of Black Consciousness, New Beacon Books, 2003
Standing Tall: Affirmations of the Jamaican Male, SALISES, UWI Mona, 2003
The People of my Jamaican Village, Blackspace, 1999
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Mary Chamberlain
Professor of Caribbean Studies, Oxford Brookes University. Mary's research involves the use of oral history and life story methods. She has also published widely on women's history and Caribbean history (in particular Caribbean migration and diasporic families, and more recently the role of migration in the development of West Indian consciousness and independent nationhood). She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and a member of a range of academic, editorial and government advisory boards. She is also a founding and principal editor of the Memory and Narrative series, a Trustee of the National Life Story Collection of the National Sound Archive of the British Library, and a member of the advisory group of the Raphael Samuel History Centre.
Her publications include: Family Love in the Caribbean: African-Caribbean Families at Home and Abroad, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2006
Narratives of Exile and Return, 2nd Edition, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2004 [1997]
(with Paul Thompson, eds) Narrative and Genre, 2nd Edition, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2004 [1998]
(with Harry Goulbourne, eds) Caribbean Families in Britain and the TransAtlantic World, Oxford: Macmillan, 2001
Caribbean Migration: Globalised identities, London: Routledge, 1998
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Merle Collins Professor of Comparative Literature and English, University of Maryland. Until 1995, Merle was a senior lecturer in our Caribbean Studies programme. She now teaches creative writing, Caribbean literature and literature of the African diaspora.
Her publications include: Lady in a Boat, Leeds: Peepal Tree Press, 2003 (poetry)
The Colour of Forgetting, London: Virago, 1995 (novel)
Rotten Pomerack, London: Virago, 1992 (poetry)
Rain Darling, London: The Women's Press, 1990 (short stories)
Angel, London & Seattle: The Women's Press & Seal Press, 1987 (novel)
Because the Dawn Breaks, London: Karia Press, 1985 (poetry)
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Camillia Cowling Camillia has recently completed her Ph.D. thesis, entitled "Matrices of Opportunity: Women of Colour, Gender and the Ending of Slavery in Havana , 1870-1888". The thesis was researched and completed at the <>University of Nottingham , but was commenced at the Caribbean Studies Centre. Camillia is the recipient of a Leverhulme Trust Study Abroad grant for postdoctoral work in Cuba and Brazil (2007-9) which will take a comparative gendered approach towards questions such as: slave crimes; marronage; emancipation and property accumulation; abolitionist rhetoric in the Atlantic world; and internal slave trades in and around the Cuban and Brazilian capitals.
Her publications include:
'Hacia la libertad: mujeres, familia y género en la abolición de la esclavitud en Cuba, 1870-1886', in La institución familiar en Cuba: pasado y presente, Havana: Centro Juan Marinello, forthcoming 2007
'Negociando a liberdade: mulheres de cor e a transição para o trabalho livre em Cuba e no Brasil, 1870-1888', in Douglas Cole Libby and Júnia Ferreira Furtado (eds), Trabalho livre, trabalho escravo: Brasil e Europa, séculos XVIII e XIX, São Paulo: Coleção Olhares, Annablume, 2006
'Negotiating Freedom: Women of Colour, Gender and the Transition from Slavery to Free Labour in Cuba, 1870-1886', Slavery and Abolition, 26:3 (December 2005), pp.377-391
Juanita Cox Juanita Cox is a PhD student writing her thesis: 'Edgar Mittelholzer and the Shaping of his Novels' at the University of Birmingham.
She is currently working on a number of projects: an introduction to Mittelholzer's first novel Corentyne Thunder, which is due to be republished in Spring 2009; a critical anthology provisionally entitled, 'In the Eye of the Storm- Edgar Mittelholzer (1909-1965)'; a compendium of Mittelholzer's early works including short stories, plays and unpublished poems; and plans to complete work in the longer term on a critical biography.
She has lectured in Caribbean Studies at the London Metropolitan University and has published an article, 'Edgar Mittelholzer: A Caribbean Voice' in the Stabroek News and Guyana Review. A version of this article is due to appear as a chapter in a book, Caribbean Voices, which is currently pending publication with Peepal Tree Press.
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Jonathan Curry-Machado
His nineteenth-century research explores the history, identity and influence of working class migrants in Cuba , in the context of transnational networks of trade, capital and technology. He also researches non-elite migratory histories between Cuba and the Greater Caribbean; and has published articles relating to La Escalera conspiracy. His contemporary research focuses on socio-political and socio-cultural reasons for Cuba 's continued stability in the face of crisis. He also writes on contemporary alternative cultural movements. He is working on London Metropolitan's contribution to the Virtual Masters in Caribbean Studies; and also coordinating a collaborative project between the Caribbean Studies Centre and the Open University's Ferguson centre, entitled 'Commodities of Empire'.
'Calaysts in the Crucible: kidnapped Caribbeans, free black British subjects and migrant British machinists in the failed Cuban revolutio nof 1843', in Nancy Naro (ed.), Blacks and National Identity in 19th Century Latin America, London: ILAS, 2003
'How Cuba Burned with the Ghosts of British Slavery', Slavery and Abolition, 25:1, 2004
'Surviving the "Waking Nightmare": Securing stability in the face of crisis in Cuba, 1989-2004', Crisis States Working Papers, 64, London: LSE, 2005
'Sin azúcar no hay país: the transnational counterpoint of sugar and nation in nineteenth-century Cuba', Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 84:1, 2007
'Contradicion, Exclusion and Disruptive Identities: The interaction of engineering migrants in mid-nineteenth century Cuban society', in A. Ashgharzadeh, E. Lawson, K. Oca & A. Wahab (eds), Disruptive Ruptures: Globality, Migrancy and Expressions of Identity, Vol. 1, Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2007
'Privileged Scapegoats: the Manipulation of Migrant Engineering Workers in Mid-Nineteenth Century Cuba', Caribbean Studies, 35:1 (Jan-June 2007)
'Sub-imperial globalisation and the phoenix of empire: engineering and commerce in nineteenth century Cuba', Commodities of Empire Working Paper No.2, London/Milton Keynes: Caribbean Studies Centre, London Metropolitan University & Ferguson Centre, Open University, 2007
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Richard Drayton
Fellow and Director of Studies in History, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; Director of Graduate Training; Senior Lecturer in Imperial and Extra-European History since 1500, University of Cambridge. Richard's research is centred on the transnational histories of Imperialism and Anti-imperialism. He looks in particular at the political, economic, and cultural histories of British and French expansion, and at the regional experience of the Caribbean.
His publications include: The Caribbean and the Making of the Modern World, London: Viking/Penguin, forthcoming
'Anglo-American 'Liberal' Imperialism: British Guiana and the World since 9-11', in William Roger Louis (ed.), Yet more adventures with Britannia, London: I. B. Tauris, 2005
'The Collaboration of Labour: Slaves, Empires, and Globalizations in the Atlantic World, c. 1600-1850', in A. G. Hopkins (ed.), Globalization in World History (London, 2002), pp. 98-114
Nature's Government: Science, Imperial Britain, and the 'Improvement' of the World, New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2000
(with Andaiye, eds) CONVERSATIONS: George Lamming - Essays, Addresses, Interviews, 1956-1990, London: Karia Press, 1992
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Evelyn Fishburn Professor Emeritus of Latin American Literary Studies, London Metropolitan University; and Honorary Senior Research Fellow, University College London. Her research concentrates on humour in Latin American Fiction, language and biculturalism, and the work of Borges.
Her publications include: (with E. L. Ortiz, eds) Science and the Creative Imagination in Latin America, London: Institute for the Study of the Americas, 2005
Borges and Europe Revisited, London: ILAS, 1998
Short Fiction by Spanish American Women, Manchester: University of Manchester Press, 1998
(In collaboration with P. Hughes)A Borges Dictionary, London: Duckworths, 1990
The Portrayal of Immigration in Nineteenth Century Argentine Literature (1845-1902), Berlin: Iberoamerikanisches Archiv, 1981
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Peter Fraser Formerly Lecturer in History at the University of the West Indies (Trinidad) and Goldsmiths College (London), and Visiting Senior Lecturer at the University of Middlesex. He has also been a Fellow of the Institute of Commonwealth Studies and the Institute of Education (University of London). He is currently editing and writing the introduction to Donald Wood's book on Berbice; and his recent research relates to Commonwealth Caribbean migration, especially intellectuals in the United States, CLR James, the political history of Guyana, and race relations and politics.
His publications include: 'Slaves or Free People? The status of Africans in England, 1550-1750', in R. Vigne & C. Littleton (eds), From Strangers to Citizens: the integration of immigrant communities in Britain, Ireland and colonial America, 1550-1750, London & Brighton: Huguenot Society & Sussex University Press, 2001
'West Indian migration in the 19th century', in Ransford Palmer (ed.), In search of a better place: perspectives on migration from the Caribbean, New York: Praeger, 1990
'British West Indians in Haiti in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries', in H. Johnson (ed.), After the Crossing, London: Frank Cass, 1988
'A revolutionary Governor-General? The Grenada crisis of October 1983', in D. A. Low (ed.), Constitutional Heads and Political Crises, London: Macmillan, 1988
'Black perspectives on British education', in J. Gundara, C. Jones & K. Kimberley (eds), Racism, Diversity and Education, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1986
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Humberto García Muñiz Acting director, and senior researcher, of the Institute of Caribbean Studies, University of Puerto Rico. His research ranges from the history of sugar, to the military and security in the Caribbean.
His publications include: La estrategia de Estados Unidos y la militarización del Caribe. Río Piedras, Instituto de Estudios del Caribe, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1988.
Bibliografía militar del Caribe. Río Piedras, Centro de Investigaciones Históricas, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1992. (Serie Bibliográfica Op. Cit., Núm. 1) (Co-author: Betsaida Vélez Natal)
El Caribe en la post-Guerra Fría. Santiago, Chile: Estudio Estratégico de América Latina, 1992/1993. (Co-editors: Jorge Rodríguez Beruff and Augusto Varas)
Security Problems and Policies in the Post-Cold War Caribbean. London: Macmillan, 1995. (Co-editor: Jorge Rodríguez Beruff)
Fronteras en conflicto: guerra contra las drogas, militarización y democracia en el Caribe, Puerto Rico y Vieques. Río Piedras: Red Caribeña de Geopolítica, Seguridad Regional y Relaciones Internacionales, Proyecto Atlantea, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1999. (Co-editor: Jorge Rodríguez Beruff)
La ayuda militar como negocio: Estados Unidos y el Caribe. San Juan: Proyecto Atlantea, Universidad de Puerto Rico; Ediciones Callejón, 2003. (Co-author: Gloria Vega Rodríguez)
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Jorge Giovannetti
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Puerto Rico (Río Piedras). Jorge completed his PhD at London Metropolitan University in 2002. His research interests include Caribbean race, ethnicity and identity; migration; and music. He is book review editor of Caribbean Studies, and on the international advisory board of Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies. He is currently a Visiting Research Scholar and Visiting Associate Professor of History at the Program in Latin American Studies, Princeton University , where he is finishing a manuscript book on the history of black British Caribbean migrants in Cuba during the early 20th century.
His publications include: Sonidos de condena: Sociabilidad, historia y política en la música reggae de Jamaica, Mexico: Siglo XXI, 2001
"Grounds of Race: Slavery, Racism, and the Plantation in the Caribbean," Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, 1: 1 (April 2006): 5-36.
"The Elusive Organisation of 'Identity': Race, Religion, and Empire among Caribbean Migrants in Cuba ," Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism, 18 (February 2006): 1-27.
"Jamaican Reggae and the Articulation of Social and Historical Consciousness in Musical Discourse," in Contemporary Caribbean Cultures and Societies in a Global Context, eds. Franklin W. Knight and Teresita Martinez -Vergne (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2005), pp. 211-232.
(with Humberto García Muñiz) "Garveyismo y racismo en el Caribe: El caso de la población cocola en la República Dominicana," Caribbean Studies, 30: 1 (January-June 2003): 139-211
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Norman Girvan Professorial Research Fellow, Institute of International Relations, University of West Indies (St Augstine). Former Secretary General, Association of Caribbean States. Norman combines an academic background with experience in government and international organisations. He is well known in the Caribbean region for his scholarship and public advocacy in a wide range of issues of Caribbean development and integration. Member of the Board of the South Centre (an intergovernmental organisation of developing countries).
His publications include: Cooperation in the Greater Caribbean: The Role of the Association of Caribbean States.. Kinsgton: Ian Randle Publications (Forthcoming) 2006
Societies at Risk? The Caribbean and Global Change. Paris: UNESCO, Management of Social Transformation (MOST) Discussion Paper No. 17, 1997
Poverty, Empowerment and Social Development in the Caribbean. Kingston: UWI Canoe Press, 1997
(With David A. Simmons), Caribbean Ecology and Economics. Barbados: Caribbean Conservation Association, 1991
(With E. Rodriguez et al).The Debt Problem of Small Peripheral Economies: Case Studies of the Caribbean and Central America. Kingston: Association of Caribbean Economists in collaboration with Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 1990
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Gad Heuman Professor of History, Director of Comparative American Studies, and former director of the Centre for Caribbean Studies, University of Warwick. Gad is editor of Slavery and Abolition, and of the related book series Studies in Slave and Post-Slave Societies and Cultures (Routledge). He is also co-editor of the Warwick University Caribbean Studies series, published by Macmillan Caribbean. He has researched on free people of colour, resistance and marronage.
His publications include: Contesting Freedom: Control and Resistance in the Post-Emancipation Caribbean, Oxford: Macmillan Caribbean, 2005
The Slavery Reader, London and New York, Routledge, 2003
The Killing Time: The Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica, London and Knoxville: Macmillan, 1994
Out of the House of Bondage: Runaways, Resistance and Marronage in Africa and the New World, London: Frank Cass, 1986
Labour in the Caribbean: From Emancipation to Independence, London: Macmillan, 1988
Between Black and White: Race, Politics and the Free Coloureds in Jamaica, 1792-1865, Westport, Conn. and Oxford, Greenwood Press, 1981
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Annette Insanally Coordinator, Latin American-Caribbean Centre (LACC), University of West Indies. Annette's research interests include Latin American and Spanish Caribbean literature, feminist literature, translating and interpreting trends and methodologies, Spanish language education in CARICOM member states, and migration studies. She coordinates the annual Intra-regional Migration Seminar Series at Mona.
Her publications include: Compilation and edition of Migration Seminar Proceedings (2001-2006)
'Eroticism - The consciousness of self as seen in Rosario Ferré's Fábulas de la garza Desangrada and Lorna Goodison's Tamarind Season', J.R. Pereira (ed.) , Caribbean Literature in Comparison, Mona: ICS, Mona, 1990 (pp 73-82)
"Contemporary Female Writing in the Caribbean", The Caribbean Novel in Comparison, Papers of IX Conference of Hispanists, St. Augustine, pp. 115-141
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Anthony Maingot Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Florida International University. He is Associate Editor of the Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture. Anthony is a widely recognised authority on social issues in the Caribbean. His research has focused on race and ethnicity in the Caribbean, and US-Caribbean relations.
His publications include: The United States and the Caribbean: Transforming Hegemony and Sovereignty, London: Routledge, 2004
Historical Dictionary of US-Caribbean Relations, Scarecrow Press, forthcoming
Small Country Development and International Labor Flows: Experiences in the Caribbean. (Vol V in series edited by Sidney Weintraub and Sergio Diaz Briquets, Westview Press, 1991)
A Short History of the West Indies. 4th ed., London: Macmillan, 1987 (co-authors: Philip M. Sherlock and John H. Parry)
The Military in Latin American Sociopolitical Evolution. Washington, D.C.: SORO, American University, 1969 (co-authors: Lyle N. McAlister and Robert Potash)
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Judith Misrahi-Barak Maître de Conférence, Université Montpellier III. Judith researches and writes on Caribbean and diasporic literature.
Her publications include: 'Running in the Family de Michael Ondaatje: le voyage décalé et son récit', in Lignes d'horizon, récits de voyage de la littérature anglaise (2002)
'A Conversation with Cyril Dabydeen', Commonwealth, 23:2 (Spring 2001), pp.107-114
'Doing away with boundaries: a few examples among Canadian writers of Caribbean and Asian descent', in Kathleen Gyssels, Maggie Ann Bowers & Isabel Hoving (eds), Convergences and Interferences — Newness in Intercultural Practices, Rodopi, 2001
'Michael Ondaatje and Photography: defamiliarizing the self in The Collected Works of Billy the Kid and Running in the Family', in La Vérité en Littérature, Editions Mallard, 2003
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Pedro Pérez Sarduy Journalist, broadcaster, poet, writer and literary critic, with a wide interest in the Caribbean and Latin America shaped by the African diaspora and syncretism of African and European cultures.
His publications include: Malecón Siglo XX, Havana: Editorial Letras Cubanas, 2005 (poetry)
Cumbite and other Poems, New York: Center for Cuban Studies, 1990
Las Criadas de La Habana, Puerto Rico: Editorial Plaza Mayor, 2001 (novel)
(with Jean Stubbs) Afro-Cuban Voices on Race and Identity in Contemporary Cuba, University Press of Florida, 2000
(with Jean Stubbs) AFROCUBA: An Anthology of Cuban Writing on Race, Politics and Culture, Melbourne/London: Ocean Press/Latin America Bureau, 1993
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Marika Preziuso Marika is completing her PhD on comparative Caribbean literature by women in the diaspora, at Birkbeck College, University of London.
Her publications include: 'Do I belong here? Images of - female - Belonging and Cultural Hybridity in Erna Brodber's Myal, Velma Pollard's Homestretch and Caryl Phillips's Cambridge', Journal of Caribbean Literatures, 4:1 (Autumn 2005)
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Brinsley Samaroo Professor of History, University of the West Indies (St Augustine). His research focuses in particular on the Indian presence in the Caribbean. He is currently the Vice-President of the Hindu Association of Trinidad and Tobago.
His publications include: (With A. Bissessar) The Construction of an Indo-Caribbean Diaspora,St. Augustine, Trinidad: University of the West Indies, 2004
The Art of Garnet Ifill:Glimpses of the Sugar Industry, London: Hansib Publications, 2003
Pioneer Presbyterians: Origins of Presbyterian Work in Trinidad ,Trinidad: Caribbean Studies and Aramalya Presbyterian Church, 1996
(With David Dabydeen) Across the Dark Waters,Macmillan /University of Warwick , 1995
(With David Dabydeen) India in the Caribbean ,Hansib/University of Warwick , 1987
Jean Stubbs Formerly Director of the Caribbean Studies Centre, London Metropolitan University (2002-9); Associate Fellow of the Institute for the Study of the Americas, School of Advanced Study, University of London; co-director of the Commodities of Empire British Academy Research Project; and co-editor of the International Journal of Cuban Studies. She has published widely on Cuba, and her research interests are tobacco, labour, race and gender in the Greater Caribbean, the Americas and beyond.
Her publications include: “Reflections on Class, Race, Gender and Nation in Cuban Tobacco: 1850-2000” in Revisting Caribbean Labor: Essays in Honour of O. Nigel Bolland (ed. Constance Sutton), Ian Randle, 2005
“Tobacco in the Contrapunteo: Ortiz and the Havana Cigar” in Cuban Counterpoints: The Legacy of Fernando Ortiz (eds. Mauricio A. Font and Alfonso W. Quiroz), Lexington, 2004
“Havana Cigars and the West’s Imagination” in Smoke: A Global History of Smoking (eds. Sander L. Gilman and Zhou Xun), Reaktion Books, 2004
“Reflexiones acerca del Gran Caribe: identidades multiples en el mundo del Atlántico” in Utopia para los excluidos: el multiculturalismo en Africa y America Latina (ed. Jaime Arocha), Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 2004
"Race, Gender and National Identity in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: Mariana Grajales Cuello and the Revolutionary Free Browns of Cuba" in Blacks and Coloureds in the Formation of National Identity in Nineteenth-Century Latin America (ed. Nancy Naro), ILAS/Palgrave 2003
Afro-Cuban Voices: On Race and Identity in Contemporary Cuba (ed. with Pedro Pérez Sarduy), University Press of Florida, 2000
"Gender in Caribbean History" in General History of the Caribbean VI: Methodology and Historiography of the Caribbean (ed. Barry Higman), UNESCO/Macmillan, 1999
Cuba (ed. with Lila and Meic Haines) , Clio Press World Bibliographical Series, 1996
AFROCUBA: An Anthology of Cuban Writing on Race, Politics and Culture (ed. with Pedro Pérez Sarduy), Latin America Bureau/Center for Cuban Studies/Ocean Press, 1993 [Spanish-language edition, with revised introduction, AFROCUBA: Una antología de escritos cubanos sobre la raza, la política y la cultura , University of Puerto Rico, 1998]
Cuba in Transition: Crisis and Transformation (ed. with Sandor Halebsky et al), Westview Press, 1992
Cuba: the Test of Time, Latin America Bureau, London, l989
Tobacco on the Periphery: A Case Study in Cuban Labour History, l860-1958, Cambridge University Press, l985 [Spanish-language edition Tabaco en la periferia: El complejo agro-industrial cubano y su movimiento obrero 1860-1959, Editorial Ciencias Sociales, 1989] |