
New Books in History Lillian Guerra, "Patriots and Traitors in Revolutionary Cuba, 1961-1981" (U Pittsburgh Press, 2023)
Feb 23, 2026
Lillian Guerra, historian of Cuban history who uses archival and oral-history research, discusses how postrevolutionary Cuba enforced a patriot-or-traitor binary. Short segments explore literacy campaigns that cultivated loyalty, neighborhood surveillance and informant networks, political prisons and rehabilitation, youth labor pedagogy, and the Mariel crisis that exposed regime vulnerabilities.
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How Citizen Complicity Sustained One Party Rule
- Citizen complicity sustained one-party rule by creating everyday accommodations that normalized state reach.
- Lillian Guerra traces how apolitical choices, invisible compliance, and constrained exits produced a durable social basis for the regime.
Literacy Brigades Cultivated Revolutionary Love
- The 1961 Literacy Campaign fused political instruction with social bonding through youth brigades sent into the countryside.
- Guerra uses Ernesto Chavez's letters showing recruits addressed parents by first name and practiced a rhetoric of 'love' for the revolution.
Fear Was Manufactured Through Neighborhood Surveillance
- Cuba built fear through visible neighborhood institutions and targeted psychological tactics rather than mass torture typical of right-wing dictatorships.
- Committees for the Defense of the Revolution plus a small, highly privileged cadre of recruited informants produced pervasive surveillance and mafioso-style blackmail.


