Afro-Cuban

people

Learn about this topic in these articles:

history of Cuba

  • Cuba
    In Cuba: Occupation by the United States

    …was effectively racist and eliminated Afro-Cubans from politics. The Platt Amendment (1901) gave the United States the right to oversee Cuba’s international commitments, economy, and internal affairs and to establish a naval station at Guantánamo Bay on the island’s southeastern coast. Most of its provisions were repealed in 1934, but…

    Read More

Latin American music

  • ceramic flute
    In Latin American music: The early 20th century

    Cuban afrocubanismo (the rediscovery of Afro-Cuban culture and its music by poets, artists, and musicians) became the most suitable source of national expression for Amadeo Roldán and Alejandro García Caturla, the outstanding 20th-century representatives of nationalism in Cuba. Afro-Cuban instruments, rhythmic structure, and folklore in general were at the basis…

    Read More

significance to Ortiz

  • Ortiz, Fernando
    In Fernando Ortiz

    …in the emergence of the Afro-Cuban movement, a trend in the arts—particularly in music, dance, and literature—that incorporated and celebrated the African component of Cuban culture.

    Read More