List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Gendered Language amid Racial Silence in Cuba
Part I. From Effeminate Colonials to Manly Soldiers: Forging Revolutionary Masculinity on the Battlefield, 1895-1898
Chapter One. "To Acquire the Dictate of Free Men": Decolonizing Masculinity through Military Service
Chapter Two. Forging Patriarch-Soldiers: Womanhood and White Patriarchy in the Construction of Insurgent Manhood
Chapter Three. Mambí or Majá?: Measures of Merit and Double Standards of Military Authority
Part II. From Brave Soldiers to New Men?: Claiming Martial Manhood during the Transition from Intervention to Occupation, 1898-1899
Chapter Four. "To Manage with Virility Our Own Affairs": Defining the New Man between Military Intervention and Occupation
Chapter Five. Testing the Racial Limits of Martial Manhood: Black Political Exclusion and Patriarchal Claims-Making
Chapter Six. Agents of Order or Disorder?: Black Veterans, Urban Law Enforcement, and the Racial Politics of Violence
Part III. From Revolutionaries to Neocolonials: The Specter of Black Criminality and the Conditionality of Public Authority, 1900-1902
Chapter Seven. Not Simply "Because One Happens to Belong to the Male Species": Race, Rural Law Enforcement, and Political Disorder amid Restricted Suffrage
Chapter Eight. "The Colored Patriot and His Box of Matches": Black Criminality, White Radicalism, and the Redefinition of the New Man in an Era of Universal Manhood Suffrage
Conclusion. The Racial Limits of Revolutionary Masculinity
Notes
Bibliography
Index