Memory and cultural history of the Spanish Civil War: realms of oblivion (2024)

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Memory and Cultural History of the Spanish Civil War

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2013 •

Aurora Morcillo

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“Corpus Delicti. Social Imaginaries of Gendered Violence”, MORCILLO, Aurora G. (ed.), Memory and Cultural History of the Spanish Civil War. Amsterdam: Brill Academic, 2014; pp. 359-400

Sofía Rodríguez López

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One Peninsula, Many Spains: An Inquiry on Memory, Historiography, and the Legacy of The Spanish Civil War from 1930 to the Present

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Adrian Rios

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The contribution of contemporary cultural representations of Republican women in the Spanish Civil War and dictatorship to the recuperation of historical memory

Cliona Hensey

This research project examines the recent ‘memory boom’ in Spain regarding the Civil War and Franco’s dictatorship, focusing specifically on the contribution of selected contemporary literary and cinematic works, which contain representations of women’s participation in the Republican resistance movement, to the recuperation of historical memory. My research engages with theories and concepts from the field of memory studies in my analyses of the selected texts and attempts to determine the role played by their respective representational strategies in the process of confronting and bringing Spain’s recent past to light.

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Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences

Inés y la Alegría: Women in the Resistance against Franco

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Ana Pociello Samperiz

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Documentación de las Ciencias de la Información

Radio Pirenaica: The Oral Historical Memory of the Grimau Case

Alfonso G A De la Quintana

El caso Grimau consistió en la detención, condena y fusilamiento de uno de los líderes comunistas más importantes de la lucha contra el franquismo infiltrado en 1962 en la España de Franco, y su correspondiente proceso judicial repleto de irregularidades gravísimas incluido un supuesto intento de suicidio. Esta noticia no hubiera tenido un impacto internacional sino hubiera sido por Radio España Independiente (REI), conocida por la opinión pública como La Pirenaica, una emisora clandestina subvencionada por la Unión Soviética. La metodología utilizada ha sido utilizar los Archivos Históricos del Partido Comunista de España, sección de guiones de Radio España Independiente, desde el siete de noviembre de 1962, día en el que Julián Grimau fue detenido, hasta el 20 de abril de 1963, cuando fue ejecutado. Un total de 164 días de emisiones consultadas. Las conclusiones más importantes son: Destacar que, a pesar de las graves irregularidades del proceso judicial y el fuerte impacto de su ...

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Another Front Line: Francoist and Anti-Francoists in Argentina, 1936-1939

Raanan Rein

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Sofía Rodríguez Ló pez Independent scholar

Enrique González Duro

Pro-Franco or, if the reader prefers, Nationalist women, were supposed to be the antithesis of the only women who, it has been assumed, were really active in the war: Republican women. Pro-Franco women are assumed to have supported both established social and gender traditions, having collaborated in the war effort without transgressing these roles. This article argues that historians have underestimated pro-Franco women's participation in anti-Republican underground activities, in part because they have tended to make a false distinction between a 'real' Fifth Column, where men were clearly predominant, and 'merely' supportive roles, where women were crucial and often in the majority. On the contrary, this article argues that Nationalist women played a key, active role in intelligence activities in the Fifth Column, in acts of resistance against the Republic and also when posted abroad conducting espionage activities, or working in information gathering behind Francoist lines.

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"Blue Angels: Female fascist resisters, Spies and Intelligence Officials in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939", Journal of Contemporary History, 2016

Sofía Rodríguez López, Antonio Cazorla-Sanchez

Pro-Franco or, if the reader prefers, Nationalist women, were supposed to be the antithesis of the only women who, it has been assumed, were really active in the war: Republican women. Pro-Franco women are assumed to have supported both established social and gender traditions, having collaborated in the war effort without transgressing these roles. This article argues that historians have underestimated pro-Franco women's participation in anti-Republican underground activities, in part because they have tended to make a false distinction between a 'real' Fifth Column, where men were clearly predominant, and 'merely' supportive roles, where women were crucial and often in the majority. On the contrary, this article argues that Nationalist women played a key, active role in intelligence activities in the Fifth Column, in acts of resistance against the Republic and also when posted abroad conducting espionage activities, or working in information gathering behind Francoist lines.

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THE LEFT IN SPAIN, 1956-1975

Abdon Mateos, Javier Muñoz Soro, Emanuele Treglia

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Memory and cultural history of the Spanish Civil War: realms of oblivion (2024)

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