Spanish history since 1808

Bibliographic Information

Spanish history since 1808

edited by José Alvarez Junco and Adrian Shubert

Arnold, 2000

  • : hard
  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The history of Spain has been revitalized since the death of Franco in 1975 and the restoration of democracy. Taking advantage of unprecedented access to archives, historians have explored long-standing issues more fully as well as bringing new questions to bear, adopting new methodologies, and developing new interpretations. The traditional view of Spain as somehow beyond the orbit of other European countries is in retreat and it is part of the purpose of the present volume to mark this reintegration of Spanish history into the history of western Europe as a whole. Leading Spanish scholars - whose work is rarely available to an anglophone audience - have combined with North American and British historians to produce a major re-evaluation of modern Spanish history, the first for some 20 years. Exploring the main issues in social, economic, cultural, and political history, within a clear chronological framework, 'Spanish History since 1808' reflects the liveliness and diversity of the field and provides points of entry to key issues for students and scholars alike.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 The travails of liberalism, 1808-1874
  • the liberal revolution, 1808-1843
  • the moderate era, 1843-1868
  • church and state, 1808-1874
  • the left - from liberralism to democracy. Part 2 The restoration, 1875-1914: political and social elites
  • Spain in the world
  • the restoration monarchy and the competition of nationalisms
  • the emerging challenge of mass politics
  • fin de siecle culture. Part 3 Spain in the interwar crisis of liberalism, 1914-1939: economic growth and backwardness, 1780-1930
  • the assult on liberalism, 1914-1923
  • the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, 1923-1931
  • the second republic, 1931-1936
  • the Spanish civil war. Part 4 The Franco regime, 1939-1975: early Francoism, 1939-1957
  • the Desarrollo years, 1955-1975
  • national Catholicism, culture and gender. Part 5 The democratic monarchy, 1975-1996: the opposition to Franco, the transition to democracy and the new political system
  • the reawakening of peripheral nationalisms and the state of the autonomics
  • the socialist era 1982-1996.

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