Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
HISTORY 497A
THE SPANISH-SPEAKING CARIBBEAN AND ITS DIASPORA
Faculty Information:
Solsiree del Moral Office Phone: (814) 863-0086
Assistant Professor Email: sxd46@psu.edu
Office: 301 Weaver Bldg Office Hours: Thursday, 1:00-2:00 pm
Mailbox: 105 Weaver Bldg
Course Information:
3.0 Credits
Tuesday and Thursday, 2:30-3:45 pm
102 Business Building
Course Description:
The islands of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic, known as the
“Spanish Caribbean,” share a history of slavery, colonialism, and migration deeply
rooted in the broader pan-Caribbean experience. This course examines the
nineteenth and twentieth century history of the three islands, including the
emigration and founding of Caribbean diasporas in the United States. We begin with
a study of the comparative economic and political history of the nineteenth-century
Spanish Caribbean, gauging the islands’ internal, regional, and international
relationships with the Caribbean and Atlantic economies. The nineteenth century
history generated similar, yet divergent, paths for each Caribbean island in the
twentieth century, paths deeply marked by the emergence of the US as a modern
empire. Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic engaged nation-building
processes in unique ways, but always interconnected with the political and economic
Latin American and US historical cycles. Equally significant in our historical analysis
of the Spanish Caribbean are the particular trajectories of Cuban, Puerto Rican, and
Dominican migrations to the US, the founding of diaspora communities, and their
relationships with each other and the home islands. Our goal in this course is to
employ a local, regional, and Atlantic lens in the study of the historical patterns of the
Spanish Caribbean, to better understand the legacies of slavery, colonialism, and
migration.
Course Objectives:
Through a combination of lectures, readings, and discussions we will work
through the main historical cycles and debates of nineteenth- and twentieth-century
Spanish Caribbean history. By the end of the semester, students will have:
1. Acquired critical knowledge of Caribbean history. The readings will work through
the historical cycles of the Caribbean in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,
including slavery, emancipation, Spanish and U.S. Empire, national revolutions,
contemporary colonialism, populism, and migration. In addition to examining the
internal history, students will have developed an understanding of the Spanish
Caribbean within the broader circum-Caribbean, Latin American, and US comparative
contexts.
2. Further developed critical reading, writing, and verbal skills. The writing
assignments, student presentations, and class discussions will help students engage
the construction of arguments, supporting evidence, and conclusions. Together we
will question how authors select sources, apply methods and build arguments,
leading to the construction of historical narratives.
Course Requirements:
Course assignments are intended to help students develop and refine critical
reading and writing skills and to complement class discussion and student
presentations.
Late policy: Paper deadlines are clearly established. Late papers will be accepted, but
the final paper grade will be lowered by one full letter grade for each day it is late.
Grading Policy:
The final course grade is composed of your student portfolio, book
presentation, book reviews, and class participation.
Attendance Policy:
Attendance is mandatory. I reserve the right to lower the final course grade
due to excessive absences (more than three absences).
Required Text:
1. Required Books:
All required books are available for purchase at the Penn State Bookstore
located in the Bookstore Building, 1 Pollock Road, University Park Campus. They are
also “on reserve” in the Penn State University Library “course reserve” system.
Childs, Matt. The 1812 Aponte Rebellion in Cuba and the Struggle against Atlantic
Slavery (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006.
Flores, Juan. The Diaspora Strikes Back: Caribeño Tales of Learning and Turning (New
York: Routledge, 2009).
Findlay, Eileen. Imposing Decency: The Politics of Sexuality and Race in Puerto Rico,
1870-1920 (Durham: Duke University Press, 1999).
Hoffnung-Garskof, Jesse. A Tale of Two Cities: Santo Domingo and New York After
1950 (Princeton: Princeton Universty Press, 2008).
Note: Readings preceded by an arrow are contained in the course packet. Readings
preceded by a bullet can be purchased at the bookstore and are physically available in the
course reserves room.
Week 10, October 26 & 28: Option #1 -- Populism in the Dominican Republic
• Richard Turits, “Bordering the Nation: Race Colonization, and the 1937 Haitian
Massacre in the Dominican Frontier,” 144-180, in Foundations of Despotism: Peasants,
the Trujillo Regime, and Modernity in Dominican History (Stanford, 2003).
Lauren Derby, “Haitians, Magic, and Money: Raza and Society in the Haitian-
Dominican Borderlands, 1900 to 1937,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 36
(July 1994): 488-526.
Week 13, November 16 & 18: Caribbean Migrations and Transnational Identities,
Part 1
• Juan Flores, “Of Remigrants and Remittances,” 33-49, “Caribeño Counterstream,” 51-
72; “Tales of Learning and Turning, 81-148,” in The Diaspora Strikes Back (Routledge,
2009).