Nineteenth-century Havana on any given January 6 could push you back to the future.
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![We'wha's travels included a trip to Washington, D.C.](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4978_GqUjbCdKQw.jpg)
Two-Spirits
All gender studies must include the Native American "mediator," which challenges gender itself.
![Always wary of what she called "the dangerous filter of interpretation."](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4929_Xv8iYJjW.jpg)
Discovering home
Often overlooked, Cuba's Lydia Cabrera remains a key figure in the history of anthropology.
![Kincaid has been both praised and criticized for her tone, perceived as angry.](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4892_JgmrjQXx6e.jpg)
Postcard from “paradise”
Author Jamaica Kincaid's 1988 definition of the nature of tourism vitally revised staid definitions.
![Chicago-born Chicana writer Castillo underscores how alienating labels can be.](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4856_3VuDejnkPT.jpg)
A different light
Chicago-born Chicana writer Ana Castillo helps sharpen the all-too-facile "citizen of the world" label.
![Cuba outlawed slavery, but only in 1886.](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4830_X02xivezIa.jpg)
The forgotten ones
Cuban author Daína Chaviano advances the cause of the island's little-discussed heritage.
![They called themselves simply Sqeliz, "The People."](https://theamericanmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/article_4795_qkf.jpg)
On being participantly observed
Questions can matter as much or more than answers, something Sherman Alexie understands.