Identidades in English No 2, May 2014 | Page 16

Facing the Challenge of New Tecnologies in Cuba class and gender in Cuba and the world Sander Alexei Álvarez Matute Computing specialist Havana, Cuba 16 espite the Cuban population’s impressive, increasing, intellectual potential, our country is suffering from a lamentable gap and lack of progress regarding worldwide technological advancement. This is due to the impediments and obstacles resulting from the State’s monopoly and strict control over information and modern technology. This model has made Cuba the Western country with the lowest level of development and access to more advanced technologies, which seriously jeopardizes its economic and cultural future. This absolute disconnect with reality was overtly revealed in a presentation about this important D topic made by economist and scholar Juan Triana Cordoví to officials at the Interior Ministry. Triana Cordoví made reference to the different economic realities affecting the country yet, when touching upon the subject of computing, he sounded totally unfamiliar with the fact that the government’s prevailing interests include dominating and politically controlling access to technology. This “specialist’s” idealized perspective when speaking to those whose function it is to control access to information, confirms many of the reasons why Cuba endures—and is the victim of— modernity’s great contradiction. In talking about