University of Pennsylvania Masthead Logo ScholarlyCommons CUREJ - College Undergraduate Research College of Arts and Sciences Electronic Journal 3-26-2019 A Tale of Two Revolutions: A Comparative Case Study of the Rhetoric of Twenty-First Century Socialist Movements in Cuba and Venezuela Andreina Lamas University of Pennsylvania,
[email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/curej Part of the Comparative Politics Commons Recommended Citation Lamas, Andreina, "A Tale of Two Revolutions: A Comparative Case Study of the Rhetoric of Twenty- First Century Socialist Movements in Cuba and Venezuela" 26 March 2019. CUREJ: College Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal, University of Pennsylvania, https://repository.upenn.edu/ curej/221. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/curej/221 For more information, please contact
[email protected]. A Tale of Two Revolutions: A Comparative Case Study of the Rhetoric of Twenty-First Century Socialist Movements in Cuba and Venezuela Abstract Cuba and Venezuela have historically been signaled as the two longest-lasting socialist revolutions and governments in the Western hemisphere. Much of their revolutionary theory has been based on the actions taken by the United States towards Latin America as a whole, as well as towards those two countries specifically. This can be most acutely perceived in the ways in which the leaders of these revolutions, Fidel Castro and Hugo Chávez, speak about the United States in relation to their own ideologies. Consequently, simultaneously studying these policies by the United States, Castro’s speeches, and those by Chávez provide evidence on how punishment and radicalization are closely related.