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Doctrine and Dilemmas of the Latin American “New Left”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
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In a broadcast from Havana on October 15, 1967, Cuba's líder máximo told his audience, “Who could deny the significance to the revolutionary movement of the blow of Che's death? It is a fierce blow, a very hard one.” One week earlier the near-legendary ideologue of the Cuban Revolution had been captured and shot by Bolivian authorities in a tiny Andean village named Higueras. Troops had also taken into custody the French Marxist Régis Debray, who had gained attention with his interpretation of the Cuban revolution before joining the Guevara-led band of rebels in Bolivia.
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References
1 Mallin, Jay, “‘Che’ Guevara: Some Documentary Puzzles at the End of a Long Journey,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, X (January 1968), 84 Google Scholar.
2 For a fuller discussion of Latin American ideological writings and their effect, see Martz, John D., “Characteristics of Latin American Political Thought,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, VIII (January 1966), 54–74 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. A recent essay by Frank Bonilla, however, has maintained that the cultural elite, although politically radical, is socially conservative; moreover, its impact is seen as limited. See Bonilla's, “Cultural Elites” in Lipset, Seymour Martin and Solari, Aldo, eds., Elites in Latin America (New York 1967). 233–56Google Scholar.
3 Students of Latin American thought have generally neglected the effect of European anarchism in the region. For recent recognition of its importance, however, see the relevant passages in Alba, Víctor, Politics and the Labor Movement in Latin America (Stanford 1968)Google Scholar; also Miguel Jorrin and John D. Martz, Latin American Political Thought and Ideology (forthcoming).
4 The standard treatments are Alexander, Robert J., Communism in Latin America, 2d printing (New Brunswick 1960)Google Scholar, and Poppino, Rollie, International Communism in Latin America: A History of the Movement, 1917–1963 (New York 1964)Google Scholar. Also see the excellent Introduction by Luis E. Aguilar in his edited volume, Marxism in Latin America (New York 1968), 3–59 Google Scholar.
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7 In 1961, the Brazilian Communists divided into bitterly antagonistic groups supporting respectively the Cuban and Soviet doctrinal positions. There were similar developments in Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, and Peru, while the Chilean Frente de Accion Popular (FRAP), an alliance of socialists and Communists, was rent with fissions that later worsened after the formation of militant pro-Chinese Marxist organizations.
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37 This admission was made in Castro's important speech on December 1, 1961. Somewhat varying versions of the “History Will Absolve Me” statement have appeared in the various collections published in Havana. For one of die first accounts of the trial itself and lengthy excerpts of the speech in English, see Dubois, Jules, Fidel Castro; Rebel-Liberator or Dictator? (Indianapolis 1959), 42–83 Google Scholar.
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40 A brilliantly polemical economist who was in 1958 a leader of the left wing of Venezuela's then dominant Acción Democratica (AD), Rangel broke away to organize the pro-fidelista Movimiento de la Izquierd a Revolucionaria (MIR ) and espoused Cuban-style violent revolution. He later withdrew from the MIR to join a minor party of the non-Marxist left, also repudiating Castro on the grounds of violations of human rights in Cuba. For a sympathetic analysis of the MIR, see Harding, Timothy F. and Landau, Saul, “Terrorism, Guerrilla Warfare and the Democratic Left in Venezuela,” Studies on the Left, IV (Fall 1964), 118–28Google Scholar.
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43 Married to the daughter of the martyred Liberal caudillo of the 1940's, Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, he founded with his wife the radical Frente Unido de Acción Revolucionaria (FUAR) and expressed strong sympathy with the Castro regime.
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55 A self-criticism by the Brazilian communists appears in Aguilar, ed., Marxism in Latin America, 250–56.
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64 An electoral study that also examines this urban violence is Martz, John D., The Venezuelan Elections of December 1, 1963 (Washington 1964)Google Scholar.
65 An official account of these events is contained in de Guerra, Ministerio, Las guerrillas en el Perú y su represión (Lima 1966)Google Scholar.
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67 Guevara, , The Diary of Che Guevara; Bolivia: November 7, 1966-October 7, 1967, edited by Sheer, Robert and with an introduction by Fidel Castro (New York 1968), 165 Google Scholar.
68 Ibid., 186.
69 Mallin, 83.
70 Aguilar, “Régis Debray: Where Logic Failed,” 32. A useful compendium including writings of the New Left that appeared after this article was in final form is Horowitz, Irving Louis, de Castro, Josué, and Gerassi, John, eds., Latin American Radicalism; A Documentary Report on Left and Nationalist Movements (New York 1969)Google Scholar.
71 Castro, , “El Deber de los Marxistas-Leninistas,” El Mundo (Havana), April 20, 1965, 6 Google Scholar.
72 Aguilar, “Régis Debray: Where Logic Failed,” 32
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