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The Conscience of Worms and the Cowardice of Lions: Cuban Politics and Culture in an American Context : the 1992 Emilio Bacardi-Moreau Lectures Delivered at the University of Miami

Author Irving Horowitz
Publisher Routledge
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Book Details
PublisherRoutledge
ISBN / ASIN1560000996
ISBN-139781560000990
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank9,671,360
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

The Cuban migration to the United States that began as a trickle in 1959, with the seizure of power by Fidel Castro and his guerrilla insurgents, and later was to become a flood tide of people exceeding one million, brought to the United States a unique cultural as well as political configuration. The Conscience of Worms and the Cowardice of Lions seeks to explore that special relationship.

The phrase "conscience of worms" has a double derivation: from Castro's critique of ideological opponents and exiles as gusanos and from the quite opposite Spanish-language tradition of gusanos de conciencia those tiny worms that burrow beneath the surface for truth. The "cowardice of lions" is more straightforward referring to those North Americans who roared in favor of Castro only to- lapse into a protracted silence when the excesses of the communist regime became evident.

This volume was delivered by Irving Louis Horowitz as the Bacardi Lecture Series at the University of Miami, North-South Center in 1992. The lectures cover a gamut of issues ranging from paradox, procrastination, and paralysis of United States foreign policy; thirty-plus years of apologetics by a select group of North American social scientists and journalists; the absorption of honest social research by the Cuban-American community; to a summing up of what has been learned from the Revolution and its impact on social and political theory.

Throughout, Horowitz shows that the major theories about the Castro Revolution have had substantial consequences both in the United States and in Cuba on how Marxism and communism are assessed in general. The survival of the Castro government, long after the upheavals that eliminated totalitarian regimes in Russia and Eastern Europe, is itself a topic covered in this probing volume, written by a long-standing analyst of Cuban affairs and social science alike.