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Literature
The country's most famous literary figure is José
Martí, whose life, ideas and martyr's death confirmed him as a
national hero, but other Cuban literary greats include Cirilo
Villaverde y de la Paz (1812-94), Alejo Carpentier (1904-80), Nicolás
Guillén (1902-89) and Guillermo Cabrera Infante (1929-).
Visual Arts
Cuba's filmmakers include Tomás Gutiérrez Alea
(1928-96), whose Strawberry and Chocolate was highly lauded, and
Humberto Solás, whose works also received much international
acclaim. Painters Wilfredo Lam (1902-82) and Marianao Rodríguez
(1912-90) are amongst the most important the country has produced,
and Manuel Mendive (1944-) is regarded as Cuba's foremost living
painter.
Cuisine
Cuban cuisine is a mix of Spanish and African
techniques, using local produce. Dishes like Moros y Cristianos
(Moors and Christian; black beans and rice), arroz con pollo
(chicken and rice) and picadillo (minced beef and rice) are common,
as are soups made with plantains, chick-peas or beans. There are,
however, food shortages in Cuba and eating out can mean long waits
at state-run restaurants or hotel dining rooms. Cuban beer (cerveza)
is excellent and the cocktails are legendary.
Music
African slaves brought rhythms and ritual dances
to Cuba, where they were blended with Spanish guitars and melodies
and then appropriated and developed throughout the Americas (the USA
in the 1920s jumped to rumba rhythms, and these, fused with jazzy
horn sections and drums, became the big-band sound).
Dance
The conga-line dance was developed by slaves
shackled together, while much of contemporary Cuban dance has
important associations with Afro-Cuban Santería religion. The most
popular Cuban music today is son, which developed in the hills of
the Oriente before the turn of the century and incorporates guitars,
tres (a small Cuban stringed instrument with three pairs of
strings), double bass, bongos, claves, maracas and voice. Mambo,
bolero, salsa and chachachá music also derived from this form. The
most famous exponents of Cuban music were Pérez Prado and Benny Moré,
but Cuban music continues to evolve and there are a great many
artists still making great music.
Government Stance
After the revolution the arts were actively
supported by the government: many theatres, museums and arts schools
were founded, musicians were guaranteed a salary and a national film
industry was established. The government has sought to redress the
influence of North American mass culture by subsidizing Afro-Cuban
cultural groups and performing ensembles.
Religion
Historically, Roman Catholicism has been the
dominant religion in Cuba and it remains so, with around 40% of
Cubans at least nominally Catholic and some 4% of the population
Protestant. The loose institutional organization of Santería, an
afro-Cuban religion, hides the fact that a majority of Cubans are
affiliated with this Afro-Catholic religious fusion in one way or
another, and their numbers have grown since the government ended its
official atheism in 1992. True to the country's mestizo culture,
Cubans grafted Catholicism onto African religions brought over by
slaves, resulting in Afro-Cuban equivalent gods for the major
Catholic saints - and the occasional animal sacrifice. When Pope
John Paul II crowned Nuestra Señora de la Caridad del Cobre, Cuba's
patroness, devotes of Santería swelled with pride, for they
identify the Virgin of Cobre with their very own Ochun, goddess of
love and abundance.
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