Mike Gonzalez (historian)

Summary

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Mike Gonzalez (born 1943) is a British historian and literary critic who was Professor of Latin American Studies in the Hispanics Department of the University of Glasgow.[1]

He has written widely on Latin America, especially Cuba and the Cuban Revolution of 1959. He characterizes Cuba as a state-capitalist economy rather than socialist.

A long-time member of the British Socialist Workers Party, he testified in Tommy Sheridan's defence at the Sheridan defamation trial and HM Advocate v Sheridan and Sheridan. Gonzalez is also a member of Solidarity – Scotland's Socialist Movement, the party Sheridan formed after the split in the Scottish Socialist Party.

Dr Francis King (University of East Anglia) wrote: Mike Gonzalez "allows his own (trotskisant) sympathies to intrude too obtrusively into his analysis."[2]

Selected articles/works edit

  • Cuba, Castro and Socialism (with Peter Binns) (1980)
  • Cuba, socialism and the third world with Peter Binns and Alex Callinicos) (1980)
  • Nicaragua : revolution under siege (1985)
  • Nicaragua : what went wrong? (1990)
  • Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Chile
  • Which way forward for the movement? (with Alex Callinicos) (2002)
  • Che Guevara and the Cuban Revolution (2004)
  • Bolivia: Rising of a People(2005)
  • A rebel's guide to Marx (2005)
  • The split in the Scottish Socialist Party(2006)
  • Hugo Chávez: Socialist for the Twenty-First Century (2014)
  • The Last Drop: The Politics of Water (2015) with Marianella Yanes

External links edit

  • Mike Gonzalez Internet Archive
  • 'Revolution Stalled? Venezuela and Bolivia: An Interview with Mike Gonzalez' State of Nature, July 2010

References edit

  1. ^ From the Hispanic Studies section of the Glasgow University website.
  2. ^ King, Francis (2017). "Stephen A. Smith, ed., the Oxford Handbook of the History of Communism; Silvio Pons, the Global Revolution: A History of International Communism 1917–1991". European History Quarterly. 47 (2): 388–391. doi:10.1177/0265691417695979mm. S2CID 197685129.