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Volume XV (2004)
Book Review: The Social Transformation of
Eighteenth-Century Cuba
David Carey, Jr. Department of History, University of
Southern Maine, Gorham, ME 04038
Johnson, Sherry. The Social Transformation of Eighteenth-Century Cuba.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2001. 267 pp. $55.00 (cloth).
Latin American colonial historiography has focused largely on Mexico and
Peru as indicative of Spanish American realities because of their
economic, political, and social influence. But the mainland experience
was vastly different from that of the Caribbean, particularly Cuba, a
hub of maritime traffic between Spain and America. In turn, the
dominance of slavery and sugar in Cuba’s historiography has obscured
other processes, patterns, and influences on the island during its over
four hundred-year colonial past. Not until the nineteenth century did
sugar plantations come to dominate the island’s economy and leave their
mark on the landscape. The concurrent demand for slaves to work these
enterprises dramatically increased Cuba’s African population to the
point where they became the majority by the middle of the century. Yet
prior to the nineteenth century, Cuba was a very different place. By
exploring the military reforms in eighteenth-century Cuba and the influx
of peninsulares (Spaniards born in the Iberian peninsula) during
the last third of the century, Sherry Johnson reveals diverse economic
pursuits and a population of predominantly European descent largely
dependent on Spanish military investment. She argues that Spanish
immigration to Cuba between 1763 and 1800 not only greatly outnumbered
African immigration, but it was also the main engine driving social
change on the island. But her book The Social Transformation of
Eighteenth-Century Cuba does more than just warn against the
monocultural myopia of sugar and slavery; it also repositions Cuba
within the broader context of Latin American colonial relations. She
argues that Cuba, more than Mexico or Peru, was Spain’s darling in the
late eighteenth century, a privileged position that sustained Cubans’
loyalty to Spain long after other colonies had declared their
independence.
After England invaded and
occupied Havana from 1762 to 1763, Spain made a concerted effort to
ensure it would never lose this critical port to another European nation
again. To this end, the crown sent Alejandro O’Reilly to the island to
institute military reforms. The salaries, fueros (judicial
privileges), and increased prestige of serving in Cuba’s armed forces
attracted peninsulares, Creoles (Spaniards born in the colonies),
and people of color to its ranks. Johnson argues, "With perhaps the
exception of slaves, almost all benefited from the increased military
presence" (p. 16). The dramatic influx of peninsulares who came
to serve in the military altered Cuba’s social life. Marriages between
these peninsulares and Creole daughters and the creolization of
the military facilitated close ties between Cuba and Spain; unlike the
rest of Latin America, Cuban Creoles enjoyed an elevated status in the
eyes of the Crown. That one third of all marriages between 1753 and 1800
in Havana were between peninsulares and Creoles reduced the
Creole stigma there. Cuba was one of the only areas in the Spanish
empire where those born in colonies benefited from privileges generally
guarded closely by peninsulares. Even if they were not explicitly
recognized as equals, many came to believe they were. Since the island’s
Creoles perceived themselves to be European and therefore blanco
(white), they tended to associate themselves more with Spain’s
inhabitants than their geographically closer mestizo, indigenous,
and African counterparts in Spanish America. Even after a new governor,
Luis de las Casas (1790–96), disrupted the social pact between the
island and Spain by favoring merchants and sugar interests to the
detriment of the military, families who had been affected by
militarization remained loyal to the Crown.
Because Las Casas’s
government was so ineffective and unpopular and he alienated the
military, by the end of his term, Cuba was on the brink of rebellion.
Unrest developed among the lower classes because they lost the
opportunity to empower themselves through the military. At the same
time, defiance and resistance spread at many levels; often captains who
were caught between their charges and Las Casas’s tyranny sided with
their constituents and circumvented government mandates. Some, such as
Captain Antonio José Morejón, became local heroes in the process. In
this way, Johnson’s revisionist history shows that many Cubans resisted
the expansion of the sugar economy because they associated it with Las
Casas, not necessarily because of a conscious disdain for the
international market economy. And from a political standpoint, Las
Casas’s reign signaled the end of Cuba’s preferential relationship with
Spain. Even though the efforts of Joaquin Beltrán de Santa Cruz and
Francisco de Montalvo averted anarchy and restored imperial order in the
wake of Las Casas’ destructive rule, Spain’s investment in the island
had been reduced and Cuban denizens’ status had been diminished in the
eyes of the Crown. By the early nineteenth century, peninsulares
no longer held Cuban Creoles in greater esteem than their counterparts
in the rest of Spanish America. Concurrently, the economy was moving
away from its intimate links with Spain and becoming more dependent on
the United States. Nonetheless, the militarization of Cuba left an
indelible mark on the families who were affected by it. Their loyalty
towards Spain and the honor of their ancestors who were brought up in
the Spanish military tradition continued well into the nineteenth
century.
Johnson adeptly argues
that this legacy of loyalty stunted independence movements in Cuba. Yet
the thoroughness with which she pursues the development of Cuban loyalty
to Spain is not emulated in her study of Cubanidad (Cubanness),
an ideology distinguished by the Creole intellectual Félix Varela and
his disciples that was rooted in Cuban pride and anti-Spanish
sentiments. She does not explain how Cuba’s heritage of loyalty to Spain
was converted into its own sense of identity. To be fair, an examination
of this ideology may be beyond the scope of The Social Transformation
of Eighteenth-Century Cuba, but when Johnson broaches the topic, the
reader hopes for a fuller explanation especially since Cubanidad
was a critical component in Cuba’s independence movements that erupted
in 1868 and again in 1895. And Johnson’s assertion that "This research
has sought to give voice to el pueblo and demonstrate that the ideology
of Cubanidad (Cubanness) took its roots in eighteenth-century
demographic and social forces" (p. 190) seems to miss the mark, if not
contradict her findings. Her empirical data and analysis convincingly
establish a cause and effect relationship between eighteenth-century
demographic and social forces and Cuban loyalty to Spain, but not
between these forces and Cubanidad. Most Cuban Creoles did not
develop a sense of Cubanidad in the eighteenth century even after
they lost their elevated status in the empire. Yet this shortcoming does
not undermine her central argument that military reforms brought about
social change on the island well before the onslaught of sugar and
slavery.
Although Johnson
intentionally focuses her study on the white population and on the
social implications of the military reforms, she provides enough
evidence to convince the reader that after 1763 much of Cuba’s economic
growth came from Spain’s investment in construction and defense on the
island. But other resources and endeavors contributed to the diversity
of the economy—cattle, hardwoods, coffee, tobacco, apiculture, wax
production, small-scale agriculture. When such economic reformers as
Francisco de Arango y Parreño and Las Casas sought to convert Cuba to a
sugar colony, they met fierce resistance not just from tobacco farmers
(who enjoyed the Crown’s favor), but also from large segments of the
population who defended the merits of economic diversity and resisted
monoculture. Leaders who eventually succeeded in shifting Cuba’s economy
to one dominated by sugar and slavery, did so against the wishes of most
Cubans.
Apart from its economic
ramifications, Cuba’s militarization also had implications for ethnic
relations on the island. Blacks who signed on to the military fared
better in Cuba than anywhere else in Spain’s overseas empire. That
two-thirds of Cuba’s free black population joined the military is a
testament both to the privileges and increased capacity to own property
that military employment promised. In some exceptional cases, slaves
earned their freedom then purchased others to work for them. One former
who was a veteran enjoyed full military privileges accumulated enough
wealth to own two slaves. Johnson a strong case to support her argument
that in addition ethnicity, class, and status (freed or enslaved),
whether not one was connected to the military also determined social
position. However, her assertion that the bridged the racial divide in
the colony is less convincing, especially since the militias were
segregated, and de sangre (purity of blood) remained a crucial
aspect establishing peninsular and Creole identity and thus their
privileged status. One father opposed his daughter’s "vile" in part
because the suitor’s family "was mixed with blood" (p. 108). Elite
perceptions of black and women as temptresses also point to ethnic
animosity. these women were deemed such a threat that a passed to force
them to cover their chests in public. Although that legislation had as
much to do with gender relations ethnic relations, it belies racial
tolerance. On the other in addition to contributing to peninsular
acceptance attraction to Creole women, the disproportionate female white
population on the island facilitated between blancos and women of
color—both free enslaved. (Conveniently, according to the data in
appendix free colored and free black women in Havana outnumbered their
male counterparts.) Naturally, the offspring associations increased the
population of color, yet fails to explore the impact these mulattos had
on Cuban society or how these relations may have contributed reducing
racial divisions. Her emphasis is on the white population and since
people of color comprised less than percent of the free population, the
growing number peninsulares and their alliances with Creoles were
significant determinant of social change on the island. Perhaps for this
reason, black voices are rarely heard monograph.
In general, considering
their infrequency in her Johnson’s treatment of women is laudatory.
Since military had been socially constructed as a man’s domain, very
nature, militarization subordinated women, but it also enabled them to
improve their lot. One group widows’ successful fight for their pensions
eventually contributed to the economic well being of all military
widows, orphans, and mothers. Many of these same women later
successfully deflected Las Casas’ efforts to repeal their benefits. When
emergencies demanded the men’s attention, women acted as "deputy
husbands" assuming control family’s internal affairs, including
financial matters. though a woman could arrange her son’s education,
daughter’s marriage and dowry, and the sale of family property, the
effect of women’s empowerment reinforced, than disrupted patriarchal
relations. Men recognized as being equal to these tasks, but Johnson is
careful overstate women’s status or power. However, at times, she seems
to underestimate their nous. Johnson’s description of a few Havana
women’s activities demonstrating "financial acumen unique for their
time" (p. 119) belies her own findings (particularly the example of the
proprietress of a boardinghouse and slaves in chapter two), which
indicate that women with financial acumen were anything but unique.
Nevertheless, Johnson’s efforts to mine archival sources for evidence of
women’s realities provide a small window into their complex mix of
empowerment and alienation in late eighteenth-century Cuba.
The transparent manner in
which Johnson weaves her methodology and primary source material into
the narrative is refreshing because it affords the reader a better
position from which to critique her work, understand how she came to
draw her conclusions and develop her analysis, and engage in the
historian’s craft. In the process she evinces the merits of microhistory
as a way of both informing and correcting macro data. But at times
extensive details bog down her narrative. Some parts are so packed with
vignettes—the beginning of chapter five, for example, reads like a who’s
who in the José de Gálvez family and entourage—that the reader loses the
larger argument. Because the plethora of information about myriad
characters can be dizzying, at times what emerges reads like a history
of great white men of late eighteenth- and early nineteenthcentury Cuba—Bartolomé
de Morales, Alejandro O’Reilly, Las Casas, Arango y Parreño, Joaquín
Beltrán de Santa Francisco de Montalvo, Varela—despite efforts to weave
story of lesser known actors. The effect contradicts the value of this
work. Nevertheless, by employing the methodology of microhistory,
Johnson reconstructs the diverse and complex lives of everyday colonial
Cubans and redressing the dominance of elite perspectives she also
enriches our understanding of Cuba’s colonial past by releasing it from
the grasp of sugar and slavery. In so doing, establishes an agenda that
encourages scholars and students to eschew a tendency to privilege macro
data and hegemonic forces, in favor of an approach that also examines
grassroots perspectives and experiences. At the same time, she is
careful to show how events in Spain and Spain’s failed military pursuits
in Algeria, for example, affected Cuba, so as not present local
conditions and realities in a vacuum. Johnson’s fine book demonstrates
how exploring the dialectic relationship between structure and
experience can yield understandings of the past in Cuba, Latin America,
and developing world.
Volume XV |