Events

Past Event

Hearing Cuban Voices in a Time of Crisis

September 17, 2024
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
America/New_York
CUNY Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10016 William P. Kelly Skylight Room

Please note this event is co-sponsored by the Oral History Archives at Columbia, but being held off-campus at the CUNY Graduate Center. Review CUNY's building policy for entry before arriving onsite.

As registration for in-person attendance is filling up quickly, there is now a Zoom link for virtual attendance. If you've registered and prefer to attend online, please cancel your in-person registration to allow someone else to sign up and be in the room.

This initial panel, the first of three inspired by Dore’s work, will focus on Dore’s personal and political history and intellectual legacy (Brooke Larson), an analysis of How Things Fall Apart (Ted A. Henken), and an introduction to Columbia’s “Cuban Voices” oral history collection by the archivist who prepared it for public access (Flor Barceló).

The late historian Elizabeth Dore spent the last 20 years directing “Cuban Voices,” a Ford Foundation-sponsored oral history project collecting memories of the Cuban Revolution. In 2023, Duke University Press published her posthumous book, How Things Fall Apart: What Happened to the Cuban Revolution, which tells modern Cuba’s story through the lives of seven islanders from the post-Soviet generation.

The 15-year project, which involved a large team of Cuban interviewers and over 100 interviewees, faced many challenges, including difficulty finding a publisher for Dore’s controversial findings. “The ghost of Oscar Lewis kept me awake at night,” she notes wryly in the book’s opening pages. Following Dore’s death in 2022, her children donated the project archive to Columbia University, where it is now digitally available to the public.

A lifelong socialist and principled scholar, Dore was dedicated to hearing diverse, critical, and often contradictory Cuban voices describing the Revolution’s challenges, rewards, and dilemmas. Her book captures the voices of those who built, supported, opposed, and even fled the Revolution.

Contact Information

OBildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies