Before the revolution, Cuba was not only a Caribbean island shaped by sugar, slavery, rebellion, and empire. It was also one of the most deeply Spanish influenced societies in the Americas, transformed by mass migration from Spain during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
White Cuba traces the demographic and cultural making of pre revolutionary Cuba, from the island's long colonial connection to Spain to the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Spanish migrants from regions such as Galicia, Asturias, and the Canary Islands. These communities helped shape Havana's streets, mutual aid societies, class structures, family networks, and ideas of European identity.
But this is not a simple story of race. Adrian Leclerc examines the myth and reality behind the idea of "White Cuba," showing how Spanish ancestry, African heritage, slavery, intermarriage, migration, class, and political upheaval created a far more complex society than any single label can explain. The book also explores how the 1959 revolution and the later Cuban exodus disrupted an older social order and carried parts of pre revolutionary Cuban memory into diaspora communities abroad.
For readers of Cuban history, Caribbean history, migration studies, Latin American identity, and diaspora studies, White Cuba offers a clear and historically grounded account of how empire, migration, race, and revolution shaped one of the most distinctive societies in the New World.