
New Books in History Renata Keller, "The Fate of the Americas: The Cuban Missile Crisis and the Hemispheric Cold War" (UNC Press, 2025)
Nov 25, 2025
Renata Keller, an Associate Professor of History at the University of Nevada, Reno, discusses her upcoming book on the Cuban Missile Crisis. She reveals how the crisis profoundly affected Latin America, challenging the conventional US-USSR narrative. Keller highlights the regional unrest, including Bolivia's riots and Nicaragua’s pro-Castro demonstrations, illustrating that ordinary citizens were pivotal in shaping the political landscape. She also addresses contemporary echoes of the crisis, linking security, sovereignty, and solidarity across the Americas.
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Beyond A Bilateral Narrative
- The crisis included OAS multilateral diplomacy, UN appeals, protests, pamphlet campaigns, and sabotage across Latin America.
- Latin American states and citizens actively shaped the crisis beyond the US–USSR binary.
Chess Cartoon From Brazil
- A Brazilian cartoon depicted Kennedy and Khrushchev playing chess with a childlike Castro behind Khrushchev.
- The image captured perceptions that superpowers toyed with global security while Castro lacked agency.
OAS Legitimized The Quarantine
- Kennedy used the term "quarantine" and secured unanimous OAS backing to give the blockade legal and hemispheric legitimacy.
- Several Latin American countries provided bases and ships to form the Inter‑American Quarantine Force.

