HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM

Milton Santos, important Brazilian geographer, stated in his writings that space is a social production through time. The present work belongs to a series of studies of Latin-American cities based on Santos´ theories. Our case study is the city of Havana. Strategically situated in the Antilles, t...

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Main Authors: RALUCA DAVIDEL, JUAN YUNDA
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2009-01-01
Series:Gestión y Ambiente
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/gestion/article/view/14212
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spelling doaj-40c40255e7124cb0ae86f072308a26e12020-11-25T02:58:35ZspaUniversidad Nacional de ColombiaGestión y Ambiente 0124-177X2357-59052009-01-0112113201HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISMRALUCA DAVIDEL0JUAN YUNDA1Dipl. Arch. Bauhaus-Weimar University - Institute for European Urban Studies Seminar: The Latin American Cities through “Space-Time”Arch. Bauhaus-Weimar University - Institute for European Urban Studies Seminar: The Latin American Cities through “Space-Time”Milton Santos, important Brazilian geographer, stated in his writings that space is a social production through time. The present work belongs to a series of studies of Latin-American cities based on Santos´ theories. Our case study is the city of Havana. Strategically situated in the Antilles, the city always played the role of a gate to the Spanish colonies in the Americas. After the Cuban independence (1898), the Caribbean city fell under the influence of the crescent power of the United States. At the turn of the XXth century, the city which during the colonial times based its economy on trade of commodities from the mainland like tobacco or sugar, turned to be funded mainly by North American tourism. The city attracted legal investment and mafia groups equally. Disparity and growing authoritarianism led to the well known Cuban Revolution and with its socialist reforms, the city froze in time. With the Soviet collapse, the government searched for economic alternatives facing a strong U.S. embargo. Tourism appeared once more as an important source of income. Yet, this new transition raises questions like: how is this reorientation going to change spatially Havana? Or, how are deeper changes in the socialist regime going to affect the heritage and identity of the city?https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/gestion/article/view/14212Socio- spatial analysis through time. Tourism. Periodization. Spatial configuration
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author RALUCA DAVIDEL
JUAN YUNDA
spellingShingle RALUCA DAVIDEL
JUAN YUNDA
HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
Gestión y Ambiente
Socio- spatial analysis through time. Tourism. Periodization. Spatial configuration
author_facet RALUCA DAVIDEL
JUAN YUNDA
author_sort RALUCA DAVIDEL
title HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
title_short HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
title_full HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
title_fullStr HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
title_full_unstemmed HAVANA: SPACE THROUGH TOURISM
title_sort havana: space through tourism
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia
series Gestión y Ambiente
issn 0124-177X
2357-5905
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Milton Santos, important Brazilian geographer, stated in his writings that space is a social production through time. The present work belongs to a series of studies of Latin-American cities based on Santos´ theories. Our case study is the city of Havana. Strategically situated in the Antilles, the city always played the role of a gate to the Spanish colonies in the Americas. After the Cuban independence (1898), the Caribbean city fell under the influence of the crescent power of the United States. At the turn of the XXth century, the city which during the colonial times based its economy on trade of commodities from the mainland like tobacco or sugar, turned to be funded mainly by North American tourism. The city attracted legal investment and mafia groups equally. Disparity and growing authoritarianism led to the well known Cuban Revolution and with its socialist reforms, the city froze in time. With the Soviet collapse, the government searched for economic alternatives facing a strong U.S. embargo. Tourism appeared once more as an important source of income. Yet, this new transition raises questions like: how is this reorientation going to change spatially Havana? Or, how are deeper changes in the socialist regime going to affect the heritage and identity of the city?
topic Socio- spatial analysis through time. Tourism. Periodization. Spatial configuration
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/gestion/article/view/14212
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