ABSTRACT

Cuban culture has long been available to English speakers via translation. This study examines the complex ways in which English renderings of Cuban texts from various domains—poetry, science fiction, political and military writing, music, film—have represented, reshaped, or amended original texts. Taking in a broad corpus, it becomes clear that the mental image an Anglophone audience has formed of Cuban culture since 1959 depends heavily on the decisions of translators. At times, a clear ideological agenda drives moves like strengthening the denunciatory tone of a song or excising passages from a political text. At other moments, translators’ indifference to the importance of certain facets of a work, such as a film’s onscreen text or the lyrics sung on a musical performance, impoverishes the English speaker’s experience of the rich weave of self-expression in the original Spanish. In addition to the dynamics at work in the choices translators make at the level of the text itself, this study attends to how paratexts like prefaces, footnotes, liner notes, and promotional copy shape the audience’s experience of the text.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|34 pages

The Politics and Poetics of the Anthology

Cuban Poetry in English

chapter 3|36 pages

Marx Goes to Mars?

Cuban Science Fiction in Translation

chapter 4|32 pages

Warrior, Thinker, Human Presence

Translating Che Guevara

chapter 5|30 pages

Listening and Reading

Cuban Music on Folkways and Paredon Records

chapter 6|27 pages

Watching and Reading

Tomás Gutiérrez Alea’s Films Subtitled

chapter 7|6 pages

Conclusion