NACLA Report on the Americas, March 2001 v34 i5 p20
COLONIZATION OF THE CUBAN BODY: The Growth of Male Sex Work in
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2001 North American Congress on Latin America, Inc.
"Because my addiction is money, and my professionalism as well." [1]
He was 21 years old, an Afro-Cuban sex worker in
What he did know was that in 1992 there were
foreigners at the Hotel Deauville who would pay top
dollar for a chance to sample the famous Cuban phallus, renowned both in gay
travel networks and in literary representations of cubanidad.
And he knew that the dollar had changed everything. What was in 1992 a tiny
number of male sex workers who catered to the few foreign capitalist investors
was by 1999 an industry of perhaps 500 young Cubans whose developing identities
as Cuban men had been interrupted by a dramatic change in both economy and
nationalist identity. A new class of male sex workers had been born, the "pinguero." Now 21 years old and struggling to survive
on the streets of
"When two people are in bed, there is always something economic that complements or impels sex."
This young man was not alone in his rather cynical belief that money is
behind all sex and love in Cuba; more than once a pinguero
repeated to me the formula: "Here, there is no love without money."
This is not a new development.
Some sex work did continue, but it was slowed to a trickle of its former extent and took on a character consistent with the changing political and cultural economy of the island. One category which did survive the cultural upheaval of the Revolution was the nineteenth century bugarron, a man who was active-insertive during anal intercourse. His partner was a maricon, a man feminized by his receptive role during intercourse. Bugarronismo left intact traditional gender roles: Sexual object was less important than sexual act, so that penetration of another man did not irreparably call into question a Cuban's gender identity. That is, a bugarron was still an hombre because he penetrated with his phallus, even though the object was another man. And the maricon was no longer a man because he was penetrated, even though he had a male body. Though in practice it is possible that all manner of sexual activity did occur and that some bugarrones did allow themselves to be penetrated, in representation the gender identity of the bugarron was stable and protected.
In the realm of homoerotic sexual behavior insertive
partners are rare and prized in
But even if formal oppression did continue with the Law of Dangerousness or
the Law of Public Scandal, this does not mean that male-male interactions did
not begin to follow the carefully-instilled logic of a socialist relational
ethic. A relationship between a bugarron and his maricon was often more than a sex-for-money exchange; it
may have lasted for years and involved exchange of favors or cohabitation. This
is surely due in part to the inefficiency of currency exchange in an economy in
which most wealth was socialized. It is also true that a currency exchange
would lay bare the sometimes material interest in the bugarronmaricon
sex act. But it could also be argued that the relational character of male sex
work in
A 21-year-old medical student described his relationship with a Spanish tourist: "He offered me material incentives. But not as payment, right? More like a gift. I accepted it because I knew that it wasn't in the spirit of payment. He kept insisting.... He always helps my mother." Most sex workers refuse to even discuss money, accepting whatever the tourist chooses to give them as a "gift": "I will never ask you for anything, I will not ask for money. If your heart dictates to you that you give me something--like, for example, money--it will come from your heart, you understand? But I will never ask you for anything." And some complain that tourists want only sex and not relationships. But under the influence of a new capitalist cultural economy, the new class of sex workers is abandoning even a pretense of relationality in their work. Some of the younger pingueros admit that "for me, being a pinguero is a business. A business in which I get what I need to dress, eat, help my family and enjoy myself. I don't do it because I like it, I do it just for the money."
"The pinguero killed the bugarron." [4]
Pinguerismo killed bugarronismo because it was far better suited for the new capitalist relations. For two reasons, the relational bugarron was not a category that could withstand the transition to capital market relations. First, because the buggaron- maricon relationship was not based on a currency exchange and could not function in the now dollar-based neighborhood of El Vedado. The dollar initiated the explosion in sex work not only by encouraging tourism but also by providing a medium of exchange so that the workers could gain more than a gift or a meal from their clients. This in turn allowed the beginning of a standardization of pricing and it irrevocably unmasked an increasingly material interest in the sex relation, despite the continued effort of many of the workers to construct the work as relational. Secondly, to be efficient in a market exchange, the workers had to have a category which was identifiable, marketable, and distinct. The new sex tourist workers in El Vedado needed a gender category w hich would both reproduce Cuban tradition but also conform to the demands of the clients for an insertive but "gay" worker--an odd configuration for a macho Cuban man.
The new sex workers had to distinguish themselves from the female sex
workers, "jineteras," now reemerging with
vigor since the legalization of the dollar. They could not simply masculinize "jinetera,"
since that would suggest that they, too, are penetrated by tourists. There is
indeed a group of young men in El Vedado who call
themselves "jineteros," but these are
sellers of black-market cigars, tour guides, promoters of private restaurants
and small-time con artists. They are a specifically nonsexual category and are
adamant about that point, since if they were seen as sex workers, they might be
imagined to be passive partners, like their female counterparts. Those young
men who are sex workers, then, had to radically distinguish themselves not only
from the con-artist jineteros (despised by Habaneros because they threaten tourism), and from the
invaded bodies of the jineteras; they had to announce
to the world that their work was precisely the opposite: masculine virility.
So, to the slang term for "dick" ("pinga")
was added the suffix "ero," meaning, a man
whose activity, or profession, has to do with his pinga.
Thus, soon after the legalization of the dollar, the word "pinguero" was born. With such a name there is
absolutely no confusion as to the role that the workers have in a sexual
encounter. This saves the men's images as "hombres
hombres," or manly men, but it also is a marketing
tool that announces to the sex tourists--who in
"Fidel" is code for the entire state apparatus, so much has the
Revolution been personalized in him. This young man from
Not only is the Cuban pinga powerful, capable of
killing in a single thrust, as in Arenas' account, but it is a limitless
resource. A university professor in
So there is less political and cultural censure of male sex work than of its female counterpart. The boys simply prove the power of their phalluses to each other and to themselves, while using the desire of the foreigners to relieve them of their dollars. Pingueros attract sex-tourism dollars to the state hotels and airline, and they multiply tourists' discretionary dollars by spending them in state stores--all the while, symbolically conquering the bodies of the foreign invaders, like any good Revolutionary Cuban man.
"It has to do with Elian."
It is little wonder then that for years the state seems to have left the pingueros alone while actively prosecuting both jineteras and "chulos"
(pimps). Jineteros are also aggressively persecuted
because they threaten tourism, since they are known for pulling scams on
foreigners, though they also provide some legitimate services to them. Although
I am assured that this is not law, police procedure is to harass and arrest any
non-pinguero Cuban who is hanging around a tourist.
When I demanded that an officer inform me why he was arresting my Cuban friend
who had been walking with me, I was told that it was to protect me from an
inevitable robbery. The pingueros, too, are harassed
constantly by the police, but they are allowed to interact with foreigners in
the two areas of pinguero activity, the movie theater
Yara and the Malecon at the
Fiat car dealership and cafe. Police demand their identity cards and
interrogate any Cuban whose familial residence is not listed as
Yet when I returned in the summer of 2000 there was a noticeable increase in
the level of police activity at both Yara and Fiat.
Whereas in 1999 the police harassment was confined to Yara
and the pingueros on the Malecon
were watched but left alone, in 2000 the police sweeps moved into Fiat. And
although tourists are generally untouchable, even I was approached at Yara and asked for my identification card. When I asked
some of the workers why they thought the harassment had increased, I received
two answers. One worker explained that it had to do with Elian and the
increased media coverage which followed: "We think it may have something
to do with Elian. Since November there have been double the police... because
she [
"Because what they love is money."
Materialism, especially adoration of
A second consequence of the introduction of capitalism to the island has been what we might call the commodification of desire: Pingueros' ability to experience and explore their desires has been interrupted by their need to conform these desires to opportunities to make money, that is, to the needs of the market. A number of pingueros explained to me that they are unable to have sex--even with a young man or woman to whom they are physically attracted--unless there is a financial element. The "Father of the Pingueros" told me: "I like sex with young guys, but as much as I like it or want to flick, if you don't pay me, I won't go with him, you understand? So if you don't pay me, I would rather jerk off with a magazine alone at home, because having sex for money is my profession.... I would like to, but I can't have sex without money.... My heart won't let me." Similar sentiments were expressed by others. One pinguero even recently paid a woman to have sex with him, even though he was 18 years old and very attractive; he could have had sex easily for free with a Cuban woman, but preferred to pay a jinetera $10. Not only the bodies but even the desire of the pingueros has been configured to turn them into sex machines, functionaries of a sex tourist industry, and indirectly, of the foreign capitalists whose investments in hotels are reaping rapidly expropriated and exported profits.
This commodification reaches not only the bodies
and desires of the pingueros, but also their sexual
and gender identities, and this is a third consequence of capitalist incursion.
For sex workers, identity functions like a packaging label on a product: It
informs potential consumers of what they can expect if they purchase that
product. Sexual identity in the past in
"Pinguero" is a category that arises from these Cubans
own self-understanding, but it also serves well those tourists seeking a sexual
encounter only. Many of them want a holiday romance,
or even a long-term relationship with a Cuban man, and so they want, and will
ask for, a "gay" Cuban. And because this is what the customers ask
for, the workers sometimes change their labels to accommodate. I have heard
more than one pinguero talking to a tourist, and when
asked "Eres gay?" the
Cuban answered in the affirmative. But the Cuban did not mean the same
thing by "gay" as did the tourist; for the latter, often from
But under the pressure of the market, even this is changing. A change in the understanding of the foreign category "gay," from a kind of sexual behavior to a kind of gendered being, will demonstrate this tendency in capitalism. My older informants, those who came to sexual maturity before the Special Period, spoke of masculine sexual identity in terms of behavior. Consider: "A man who goes with a man is gay." According to this respondent a man is gay not because he is gay, but because he does gay, that is, "goes with a man." It is important to note that this young man was 23 years old at the time of the interview, so he would have been approximately 14 at the initiation of the Special Period and 17 when the dollar was legalized; his sexual identity would have already been largely settled by the time capitalist reforms began to commodify his body. But younger Cuban men, whose puberty had come after the onset of the Special Period, tended more to speak of pinguerismo and gay as ontological categories; language of doing gives way to language of being. When I asked if gay Cubans were still considered hombres, he stated: "Yes, we're hombres, but in our hearts we are gay." Here, gay is not about sexual behavior, as for the older man, but about a core of being. This young man was only 18 at the time of the interview, hence he would have been nine at the initiation of the Special Period and 12 when the dollar was legalized. His sexual identity formation occurred fully within the context of capitalist incursion and sex tourism, and it is therefore no accident that he believes that there is a part of him which is gay in his being, in his heart.

This is why "the pinguero killed the bugarron." Capitalism cannot tolerate ambiguity, not
least in identity, and particularly when a certain identity carries with it the
potential for profit from exploitation of resources. In the case of pinguerismo in
"To try everything."
Whether or not "Fidel knows everything," the Cuban state is not to
"blame" for pinguerismo. Indeed, for some
young men it provides a constructive function, allowing them to experiment in
homoerotic activity and giving them a sense of community with other workers.
One young man came to Yara "to get a change of
life, to try everything. Before, I didn't know about the gay world. I want to
know the world. I didn't come because of financial need. I haven't earned the
money that I wanted, but I have had lots of experiences, good ones as well as
bad ones, with friendships in the gay world." It is true, of course, that
for many of the young men the sex with older and unattractive men is a
demeaning and even nauseating experience: "I wouldn't wish this life on
anybody. Because selling your body is one of the worst things in the world, but
it's what gets the most money here in
This is not to valorize sex work; rather it is simply to say that sex
tourism per se is not the problem of the pingueros in
G. Derrick
Hodge is a doctoral student in Anthropology
at the City University of New York and a medical anthropologist at the
(1.) Unless otherwise noted, all quotes unattributed
in the text are from male Cuban sex workers interviewed between July 1999 and
July 2000 in
(2.) Ernesto Melendez Bachs, "Presentation of
a Law on Foreign Investment," delivered to the National Assembly of
People's Power,
(3.) Samuel Feijoo, "Revolucion
y vicios," El Mundo,
(4.) A university professor in
(5.) Ilan Stavans, "The Latin Phallus," and Ricardo Pau-Llosa, "Romancing the Exiliado," both in Ray Gonzales, (ed.), Muy Macho: Latino Men Confront Their Manhood (New York: Anchor Doubleday, 1996); Reynoldo Arenas, The Assault (New York: Penguin USA, 1995).
(6.) A university professor in