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Tell My Mother I Gone To Cuba: Stories of Early Twentieth-Century Migration from Barbados

Original price was: $30.00.Current price is: $24.60.

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This book provides a historical account of early 20th-century Caribbean migration, using primary sources and oral histories to teach about social and economic history.

Tell My Mother I Gone To Cuba: Stories of Early Twentieth-Century Migration from Barbados
Tell My Mother I Gone To Cuba: Stories of Early Twentieth-Century Migration from Barbados
$30.00 Original price was: $30.00.$24.60Current price is: $24.60.

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2016 Foreword INDIES Finalist

Barbadians were among the thousands of British West Indians who migrated to Cuba in the early twentieth century in search of work. They were drawn there by employment opportunities fuelled largely by US investment in Cuban sugar plantations. Tell My Mother I Gone to Cuba: Stories of Early Twentieth-Century Migration from Barbados is their story. The migrants were citizens of the British Empire, and their ill-treatment in Cuba led to a diplomatic tiff between British and Cuban authorities. The author draws from contemporary newspaper articles, official records, journals and books to set the historical contexts which initiated this intra-Caribbean migratory wave. Through oral histories, it also gives voice to the migrants’ compelling narratives of their experience in Cuba. One of the oral histories recorded in the book is that of the author’s mother, who was born in Cuba of Barbadian parents.

Additional information

Weight 0.318 lbs
Dimensions 15.2 × 1.4 × 22.9 in

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