********************  POSTING RULES & NOTES  ********************
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
*****************************************************************

http://cubasocialistrenewal.blogspot.com.au/2015/01/finally-my-masters-thesis-on-cuba.html

Finally, my Masters thesis on Cuba

Dear readers of Cuba's Socialist Renewal,

After a two-and-a-half year hiatus, I'm pleased to announce that I'll
resume posting original translations and commentaries in 2015, beginning
with this post.

As explained in my last post in August 2012, I began work on a Masters
thesis on Cuba's socialist transition, under the auspices of Sydney
University's Department of Political Economy—a thesis that would build on
the translations and analyses that I've shared with you via this blog. At
the outset, I had no intention of setting aside the blog to write the
thesis, but the need to focus intensely on the thesis conspired against my
best intentions.

Other life commitments also had to take precedence for a while, and what I
had misunderstood to be a one-year time frame for research, writing and
coursework was actually a two-year submission deadline. Naturally, I made
the most of that extra year to delve deeper, refine the argument and polish
the exposition. I was rewarded for this effort with a most unexpected (yet
most gratifying) High Distinction grade.

I began the thesis under the supervision of Dr Tim Anderson and completed
it under the supervision of Dr Damien Cahill, both from the Political
Economy department at Sydney University. I am indebted to them for their
encouragement, guidance and patience. The whole process was a steep
learning curve for me: I joked with my supervisors that I had to undergo my
own 'socialist transition' to academic writing, which differs from blog
commentaries in structure, style and rigour.

As you can see from a glance at the references list, I made extensive use
of original translations posted to this blog as source material. Those of
you inclined to read the thesis itself will find that key themes and
threads of argument elaborated here are woven into the thesis. In other
words, the thesis is a continuation of the work shared with you here since
December 2010. As noted in the thesis Introduction, my thesis is a work of
conceptual synthesis, historical analysis and reinterpretation.

While it stands alone as an academic thesis, it was not written in pursuit
of an academic career. Rather, its primary purpose is to serve as a
contribution to the wider debate—above all among partisans, solidarity
activists and sympathisers of the Cuban Revolution—on the past, present and
future of Cuba's socialist project. While I had to make certain unavoidable
concessions to academic style, it is written with this wider audience in
mind—avoiding, I hope, any lapses into unexplained Marxist jargon or into
arcane or incomprehensible 'academese'.

I would love to translate this thesis into Spanish, but a golden rule of
translation is 'never translate your own work'. Besides, I can translate
from Spanish to English reasonably competently, but the other way only
crudely. Only a native Spanish speaker with a keen grasp of the Cuban
context and of Marxism could do it justice.

That's enough about my thesis, except to say that it's freely accessible
here by anyone anywhere; and that I welcome any feedback and constructive
criticism you may have via email or, if you like, as comments posted below
this post. Please feel free to forward the above link (or the associated
PDF file) to anyone who may be interested.

Over the coming months I will resume translations and commentaries on
Cuba's socialist renewal, as I see it, and the context in which this
renovation process is now unfolding: the beginning of the end of the US
blockade signalled by Obama's December 17 statement on US-Cuba relations.
In other words, the Cuban Revolution's triumph over half a century of siege
and isolation, and the pursuit of US imperialism's historic objectives by
other, less confrontational means.

Before concluding this post, I should also mention that I had the honour of
being elected president of the Sydney branch of the Australia-Cuba
Friendship Society in June. As part of the global Cuba solidarity movement,
the Society welcomes the return of all of the Cuban Five to Cuban shores
after their long, unjust incarceration in US prisons.

Their stoic and dignified resistance symbolises Cuba's epic struggle.

Happy New Year to you all.

Marce Cameron
Sydney, Australia
_________________________________________________________
Full posting guidelines at: http://www.marxmail.org/sub.htm
Set your options at: 
http://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to