The origins of Argentina's revolution of the right
著者
書誌事項
The origins of Argentina's revolution of the right
(A title from the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies)
University of Notre Dame Press, c2003
- : cloth
- : pbk
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注記
"From the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies" -- Back cover
Includes bibliographical references and index
収録内容
- Reactionary modernism, fascism, and the language of cultural emancipation
- Nationalism and the rebellion against positivism
- The origins of the Argentine national right
- The Década Infame: the conservative restoration and the rise of cultural nationalism
- The integralist right and the populist left: anti-imperialism, productionism, and social justice
- The integralist-populist synthesis and the new order
- The military in power and raise of early Peronism: the consolidation of the integralist-populist formula
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The Origins of Argentina's Revolution of the Right traces the ideological roots and political impact of Argentine right-wing nationalism as it developed in the 1930s and 1940s. In this spirited book, Alberto Spektorowski focuses on the attempt by a new brand of nonconformist intellectuals to shift the concept of Argentine nationalism from its liberal incarnation to an integralist-populist one and, simultaneously, to change Argentina's path of development from liberalism to a "third road" of economic autarky.
Spektorowski maintains that the "third road" developed in 1930s Argentina through the juxtaposition of two apparently opposing types of anti-liberal ideological currents: a right-wing authoritarian current reliant upon counterrevolutionary European sources, and an anti-imperialist, populist current. He shows that both of these wings rejected liberal institutions, bourgeois society, cosmopolitanism, and old-type conservatism, and became profoundly anti-imperialist. Both defended a "pro-Axis" neutrality during World War II, and both set the ideological stage for Argentina's sociopolitical shift of the 1940s. Spektorowski concludes that both of these currents produced a single nationalist ideology that became the intellectual framework in which the "repertoire" of political values of the 1943 military regime and Peronism was subsequently elaborated.
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