The Spanish Civil War was fought not only on the streets and
battlefields from 1936 to 1939 but also through memory and trauma in
the decades that followed. This fascinating book reassesses the eras
of war, dictatorship and transition to democracy in light of the
memory boom in Spain since the late 1990s. It explores how the civil
war and its repressive aftermath have been remembered and represented
from 1939 to the present through the interweaving of war memories,
political power and changing social relations. Acknowledgement and
remembrance were circumscribed during the war's immediate aftermath
and only the victors were free to remember collectively during the
long Franco era. Michael Richards recasts social memory as a
profoundly historical product of migration, political events and
evolving forms of collective identity through the 1950s, the
transition to democracy in the 1970s, and in the bitterly contested
politics of memory since the 1990s.
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Making Memory and Re-Making Spain since 1936
Product details
ISBN
9781107241053
Published
2013
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author