Demystifying las UMAP: The Politics of Sugar, Gender, and Religion in 1960s Cuba

Author(s)Tahbaz, Joseph
Date Accessioned2016-09-27T02:02:22Z
Date Available2016-09-27T02:02:22Z
Publication Date2013-12-31
AbstractThe UMAP, las Unidades Militares de Ayuda a la Producción, were forced-work agricultural labor camps operated by the Cuban government during the mid-1960s in the east-central province of Camagüey. The current academic literature on the UMAP camps has exclusively taken into account homosexual internees’ experiences and has characterized the camps solely as an instance of gender policing. This paper will argue: 1) the UMAP was an integral component of the Cuban Revolution’s larger economic, social, and political goals, 2) the experiences of the diverse gamut of UMAP internees cannot be generalized into a single, concentration-camp narrative, and 3) although gay men certainly endured horrific treatment at the camps, Jehovah’s Witnesses were the victims of the worst brutality at the UMAP.en_US
ISSN1536-1837
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/19725
Languageen_USen_US
PublisherLatin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DEen_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
KeywordsCubaen_US
KeywordsUMAPen_US
KeywordsForced laboren_US
KeywordsGenderen_US
KeywordsRaceen_US
KeywordsHomosexualityen_US
KeywordsJehovah's Witnessesen_US
TitleDemystifying las UMAP: The Politics of Sugar, Gender, and Religion in 1960s Cubaen_US
TypeArticleen_US
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