ID | 083537 |
Title Proper | Decolonizing the Cuban Missile Crisis |
Language | ENG |
Author | Laffey, Mark ; Weldes, Jutta |
Publication | 2008. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Postcolonial scholars show how knowledge practices participate in the production and reproduction of international hierarchy. A common effect of such practices is to marginalize Third World and other subaltern points of view. For three decades, analysis of the Cuban missile crisis was dominated by a discursive framing produced in the ExComm, one in which Cuba was invisible. The effort to produce a critical oral history enabled Cuban voices-long excluded from interpretive debates about the events of October 1962-to challenge the myth of the crisis as a superpower affair. Despite the oral history project's postcolonial intervention, however, and greater attention to Cuba's role in the crisis, this framing persists and is reproduced in the micro-practices of scholarship. Decolonizing the crisis, and by extension the discipline itself, is not easy to do. |
`In' analytical Note | International Studies Quarterly Vol. 52, No.3; Sep 2008: p555-577 |
Journal Source | International Studies Quarterly Vol. 52, No.3; Sep 2008: p555-577 |
Key Words | Cuban Missile Crisis ; Intervention ; Cuba ; United States |