<div>In the nineteenth century the island of Cuba was a popular site for US travelers who wrote dozens of travelogues about their experiences.&nbsp;At the same time Cuban exiles living in the United States escaping from Spanish colonial repression wrote about their island and about their US experiences.&nbsp;Within the trove of writings about Cuba in relation to slavery and a rising US empire in the region Ivonne M. García's&nbsp;<i>Gothic Geoculture: Nineteenth-Century Representations of Cuba in the Transamerican Imaginary</i> shows how a group of writers on both sides used the language of fear to construct gothicizations of the island (and of the United States) through tropes of corruption doubleness and monstrosity.&nbsp;García coins the term gothic geoculture to show Cuba's identity in the nineteenth century as existing at the crossroads between colonialism slavery and transamericanity. Specifically looking at a period of colonial anxiety between 1830 and 1890 García exposes the ways some writers code Cuba as dangerous and destructive demonstrating how these transamerican figurations created a series of uncanny simultaneities that expand on and complicate the ways we understand how Cuba and the hemisphere were imagined at that time.<br> &nbsp;</div>
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