样式: 排序: IF: - GO 导出 标记为已读
-
Feminist movement and suffrage: how women obtained the right to vote in Bolivia (1920–1952) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-17 Maria Elvira Alvarez Gimenez
With its proclamation of universal suffrage in 1952, Bolivia fits into Samuel Huntington’s “second short wave of democratization” (1943–1963). In 1952, all women and men gained the right to vote, m...
-
Introduction: revisiting the “second (short) wave” of democratisation in Latin America, 1943–1962 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-17 Nicolás Prados Ortiz de Solórzano, Emilie Brickel-Curryova, Oliver Fletcher, Andrés M. Guiot-Isaac
Published in Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (Vol. 30, No. 2, 2024)
-
“Ni Con Unos Ni Con Otros”: the anti-imperialist and anti-totalitarian movement for democracy in Latin America, 1940–1960 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-15 Nicolás Prados Ortiz de Solórzano
In 1950, exiles from all across Latin America met in Havana for a congress. The event’s purpose was to unite those striving for a democratic Latin America, free from US imperialism and Soviet total...
-
Intellectuals and democracy: the Argentine magazine Contorno (1953–1959) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-13 Rodrigo López Martínez
This paper focuses on the relationship between Argentine intellectuals and democracy between 1958 and 1962. In the Argentine magazine Contorno (1953-1959), renowned figures such as Ismael and David...
-
A jumble of partial democratizing initiatives in mid-century Latin America Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-08 Laurence Whitehead
The “second wave” metaphor is a convenient but somewhat misleading approximation to how the republics of Latin America adjusted to the post-1945 balance of world forces. In a short period the regio...
-
Brazilian reconstitutionalization in the second wave: a competition of democracies Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-07 Jonathan Madison
In the decade and a half following World War II, processes of democratization took place across the globe in what political scientists frequently refer to as the second wave of democracy. This demo...
-
Democratization and inclusion: what women’s enfranchisement tells us about the second wave of democracy Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-02 Isabel Castillo
Most Latin American countries enfranchised women during the second wave of democracy. But how did this expansion of participation relate to other dimensions of democracy? In this essay, I use Rober...
-
An uneven wave: Peronism and democracy in Argentina, 1946–1955 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-06-29 Jorge A. Nállim
Samuel Huntington’s conceptualization of waves of democracy in Latin America raises questions on its suitability for analyzing mid-twentieth-century movements and regimes such as the one presided b...
-
Economic warfare goes global: the incorporation of the Indies in the great reprisal against the French, 1635–1640 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-06-25 Eleonora Poggio
This article examines the Indies’ significant role in Spain’s economic warfare during Philip IV’s reign. It challenges the perception of the American territories as peripheral participants, emphasi...
-
On the trail of banal racism: a Gypsophile genealogy of Romaphobia Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-06-24 María Sierra
Based on a concern to study historical forms of racism that usually fall under the radar of histories of racism that focus on the peak moments of regimes such as Jim Crow laws in the United States,...
-
‘Requeiro huma duas e tres vezes’: the confrontation between Ruy López de Villalobos and Jorge de Castro over the Maluku Islands in 1543-4 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-27 Jean Andrews
This article examines in detail the exchange of letters between Ruy López de Villalobos, captain general of a significant Spanish fleet, which landed on the island of Mindanao in February 1543, and...
-
Apologists for Spanish intolerance and the dawn of the “black legend”, 1556–1665 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-24 Juan Pablo Domínguez
The image of Spain as the epitome of religious intolerance is believed to have been constructed by Spain’s enemies during the reign of Philip II, and later disseminated by Enlightenment and liberal...
-
The Gauchos as possible heirs of the Moriscos: the case of the Argentine asado Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-24 Veronica Menaldi
Asados, Argentine cook-outs or barbecues, to this day have a prestigious reputation within Argentine identity often due to its lasting association with the Gauchos—rural Argentine cowboys—who flour...
-
Born to blossom, bloom, then perish? The rise and fall of the Pomells de Joventut de Catalunya (1920–1923) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-21 Richard Huddleson
The activities, outputs, and histories of youth organisations across a range of contexts can give us a privileged understanding of later political movements that find their roots with those youth m...
-
The political culture of Caribbean sovereignty Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Linden F. Lewis
This article is part of a continuing discourse in the Caribbean about the exercise of sovereignty and the need to hold steadfast to the concept as a bulwark against imperial erasure of cultural ide...
-
Pan-Americanism in dispute. U.S. leaders, Bolívar, and San Martín in the centenaries of the Monroe Doctrine and the Amphictyonic Congress of Panama (1923-1926) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 María Laura Amorebieta y Vera
This paper analyzes the representations of U.S. statesmen, Bolívar, and San Martín during the centenaries of the Monroe Doctrine (1923) and the Congress of Panama (1926). On the one hand, it examin...
-
Has the concept of censorship gone astray? How to operationalize muddy waters? Half a century of censorship in Portugal Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Rita Luís, Adalberto Fernandes
Censorship studies are currently facing an important conceptual change towards enlarging the phenomena deemed to be censorial (class, race, gender), while risking losing sight of the conceptual spe...
-
“¡Vivan las tribus!”: persecution, resistance and anarchist agency in the Popular Army during the Spanish Civil War (1936-9) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Henry Brown
The anarchist participation in the Popular Army during the Spanish Civil War has largely been subsumed into wider narratives regarding the modernising impulses of the Republican state on the one ha...
-
A queer problem: writing sapphic anarchism in Spanish Civil War fiction Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Charlotte Byrne
In this article, I offer an analysis of anarchist attitudes towards lesbianism in Spain in the 1930s and how these attitudes have informed my creative practice in writing a novel about the experien...
-
Iberian anarchism in twentieth-century history Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Joshua Newmark, Sophie Turbutt
This essay introduces a Special Issue exploring the history of Iberian anarchism in the twentieth century. It highlights the paucity of research on Portuguese anarchism in general, and argues that ...
-
“Anarchy in the streets”: anarchism, public order and social housing in Portugal (1900-1940) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Diogo Duarte
In this article we aim to contribute to the history of contemporary State by bringing into the picture what often falls outside its domain, defies its logic and is built against it. For that purpos...
-
It started on the railroads: the journey of an anarcho-syndicalist in the Spanish Civil War Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Ana Campos
This paper aims to trace the journey of Manuel António Bôto, a Portuguese anarcho-syndicalist militant during the Spanish Civil War, who lived and worked in the region of Setúbal, near Lisbon. Bôto...
-
Transnationalism, class and national identity in the Cuban labour movement (1898-1902) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Alex Doyle
For a Cuban anarchist movement intent on promoting harmonious class relations, attachment to national identity within the working classes was a divisive wedge which limited this objective. Transnat...
-
Paremiological Analysis of Francisco Franco’s New Year messages Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Luis J. Tosina Fernández
This paper analyzes the New Year messages delivered by Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War and his mandate as chief of state (1937–1974) from a paremiological perspective to determine the...
-
From peaceful coexistence to the War of all the People: Cuba and the Cold War in Central America and the Caribbean (1975-1983) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Radoslav Yordanov
Building on recent scholarly interest in Latin America’s Cold War, this paper breaks new ground in using a broad range of original documents from previously largely overlooked voices – the foreign ...
-
“The teaching of appreciation”: the Amistad Judeo-Cristiana and the inclusion of Jews in Spain’s public sphere during the Franco Dictatorship Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-09-12 Raanan Rein, Pablo Bornstein
Established in 1961 in Madrid, the Amistad Judeo-Cristiana strove to promote a dialogue between Catholic and Jewish Spaniards. The article accounts for the Amistad’s origins and its development, ex...
-
Confrontations in the Argentine Congress during state formation (1862-1880): Provincial politicians, national authorities, and the public sphere of Buenos Aires Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-12 Laura Cucchi
ABSTRACT The paper analyses physical and verbal confrontations that unfolded in the Argentine Congress during the process of state formation, to understand the connections between those altercations and other dimensions of the political conflict of the time. In the mid-nineteenth century, Argentina was organised as a representative and federal republic. Congress became then the incarnation of the federation
-
After the Purchase: Spanish Diaspora, Nation and Empire in New Orleans (1803–1865) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-12 Ignacio García de Paso
ABSTRACT After half a century of Spanish imperial control over the Mississippi, the territory of Louisiana was purchased and annexed to the United States in 1803. The goal of this article is to examine the continuities of the Spanish imperial dominion over New Orleans since the Louisiana Purchase up until the American Civil War, using the Spanish-speaking community as an observatory to trace them.
-
Transnational Fascism: Portugal and the Brazilian Integralism of Plínio Salgado Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-29 Leandro Pereira Gonçalves
ABSTRACT The Brazilian Integralist Action (AIB), the most successful fascist movement in Latin America, was created on 7 October 1932. Under the leadership of Plínio Salgado, its purpose was to create an original doctrine. Fascist politics were not restricted to Europe – it crossed borders and directly influenced Latin American politics. In view of this, this research adopts the principle that fascism
-
Late nineteenth-century popular printed poetry in Chile and its contribution to a radical cultural theory Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-21 Chiara Sáez, Antonieta Vera
ABSTRACT The subject of this study is Lira Popular in Chile, printed and distributed between 1866 and 1930. It was a publication halfway between literature and journalism, constituting a differentiated and autonomous communicational practice that can be considered a primary source through which to know the world visions and representations of the popular sectors in Chile at the turn of the century
-
The Atlanticity of the Macaronesian islands during the Iberian Union Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-15 Javier Luis Álvarez Santos
ABSTRACT The search for the definition of the Macaronesian islands world (Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands and Cape Verde) has been a subject of constant reflection for the interpretation of these societies, both to understand their origin and their worldview, and to define the parameters that unite the island spaces with the Atlantic and, consequently, with that which is foreign. This research is focused
-
“When the overseas provinces are called by the Constitution” (About the constitutional status of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines, 1837-1898) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-08 María Julia Solla Sastre
ABSTRACT This article discusses the relationship between constitution and colonies in Spain. Since 1837, Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines were expressly excluded from the formal constitutions of the metropolis. Differently to the type of constitutionalism from which they were expelled, the colonies, however, seemed to retain a real and material constitution, defined by geographers with geographic
-
Introduction: Social reform, Gender and Sexuality: recent historical approaches to the origins of the welfare state in Spain Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-03-31 Inmaculada Blasco Herranz
Published in Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (Vol. 29, No. 1, 2023)
-
Who should procreate? Selecting the best breeders through the control of marriage, Spain 1850s–1920s Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-03-08 Marie Walin
ABSTRACT Prenuptial certificates were one of the most widely debated eugenicist measures in Spain, despite never having been legally adopted (as they were in several western European and Latin American countries). This article suggests antecedents for this measure by looking at arguments which developed in Spain from the 1840s that favoured controlling procreation in order to improve future generations
-
Hygiene of reproduction, maternal culture and sexual differentiation. Eugenics in Argentina and Spain during the interwar period Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Helena Andrés Granel
ABSTRACT This work analyses the ideas about maternity and female education deriving from different eugenic proposals developed in Argentina and Spain during a period of intense international debate on the implications of voluntary birth control for the future of the race and nations. In an age in which state intervention in human reproduction was presented as a solution to social healthcare problems
-
Electricity, national identity and regeneration in Spain around 1900 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Daniel Pérez-Zapico
ABSTRACT This article analyses how electricity and electrical technologies were used to generate a whole series of narratives about national regeneration in a context of national (and imperial) decline. It will follow the debates that the advent of the “electrical era” triggered among a group of Spanish engineers that in 1902 published the book La ciencia y la industria eléctrica en España al subir
-
“That other woman–person with a broad social mission”1: historical feminism, social reform, and citizenship in Spain Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Inmaculada Blasco Herranz
ABSTRACT This article aims to contribute to a better knowledge of historical feminism in Spain based on and in dialogue with the wealth of research on the subject by Spanish historiography in recent decades. Although the social nature of Spanish feminism and its articulation around notions of sexual difference has been pinpointed, a more profound reflection on the social nature of feminism, as well
-
From liberal organicism to social citizenship Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-02-26 Miguel A. Cabrera
ABSTRACT The aim of this article is to explore the historical genealogy and the process by which social citizenship was constituted in Spain. Because its origins lie in nineteenth -century social reformism, the reasons why it appeared and the repercussions it had require analysis. This analysis clearly reveals that social reformism emerged as the result of the internal crisis of the imaginary of classical
-
Anarchism, colonialism and the question of “race” in Portugal (c.1890-1930) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Richard Cleminson, Diogo Duarte
ABSTRACT This article explores, through a close reading of newspapers and publications connected to the Portuguese libertarian movement, anarchist discourses and practices around understandings of “race” in Portugal in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A contribution is made both to studies of Lusophone anarchism as well as broader labour movement history where analyses of the interconnections
-
Introduction: “ongoing” mobilities in the Early-Modern Spanish world Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Pablo Hernández Sau, Francisco A. Eissa-Barroso
ABSTRACT Lives characterised by staggered, stepwise or “ongoing” mobility were ubiquitous in the Early-Modern Spanish world. However, individuals who repeatedly alternated long-distance relocation with prolonged periods of sojourn in different places have attracted limited attention from historians. Contemporary migration studies, by contrast, increasingly stress the importance of considering experiences
-
Muslim sequential mobilities. Merdia ben Hazman, an “exceptional” case in the Early Modern Spanish Mediterranean Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-13 Érika Rincones Minda
ABSTRACT In 1703 Juan de Junterones bought in Murcia a Christian slave, María de la Cruz, a single woman who had previously been enslaved to Francisco Salinas in Madrid, and who had been baptized in Jumilla. Earlier in her life, she had been a free, married, Muslim woman in Oran called Merdia ben Hazman. Hers was a life of multistage geographical mobility accompanied by radical social, legal, and religious
-
House of Trade: Mestizo Children, Merchant Networks, and Sixteenth-Century Empire Building in Early Modern Colombia Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-04 Katherine Godfrey
ABSTRACT Over the course of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, dozens – if not hundreds – of mestizo, or mixed-race, children and adolescents journeyed to and from the Iberian Peninsula from Spain’s American territories. A significant number of them hailed from northern South America. Born from the often-violent encounters between Indigenous and European peoples, mestizo children facilitated
-
Transimperial mobilities, slavery, and becoming Catholic in eighteenth-century Cartagena de Indias Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-02 Bethan Fisk
ABSTRACT Complementing the literature on inter-Caribbean Spanish religious “sanctuary” policy and maritime marronage, this article illuminates how enslaved people shared and acted on religious knowledge across oceans and imperial boundaries, long before the “Age of Revolutions.” Curaçao-born Nicholas Baptista, initially with a Dutch enslaver, and Juan de Rada, born in the Portuguese East Indies and
-
Learte’s dream. Spanish transatlantic mobility in the eighteenth century through the autobiography of a Navarrese migrant Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-02 María Victoria Marquez
ABSTRACT Fracasos de la fortuna is the title of Miguel de Learte Zegama’s autobiography written during the 1780s. Learte Zegama, born in Sangüesa (Navarre) circa 1731, decided to write his memoirs from his childhood in the north of Spain, his years in Cadiz, his travel into the Canary Islands, and his emigration to the province of Rio de la Plata around 1750. This narrative outlines a personal defence
-
“Me hace dudar de tu venida”: mobile immigrants, colonial enterprise, familial obligation, and the complications of a transatlantic marriage Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Jesse Cromwell
ABSTRACT Bourbon reformers encouraged impoverished Canary Islanders to repopulate and cultivate peripheral locales of the empire throughout the eighteenth century. However, this mobility clashed with the family obligations of those settlers. In 1759, at the age of eighteen, Domingo Galdona left Tenerife in the Canary Islands to make his fortune in Venezuela, settling in Cumaná and accumulating a handsome
-
Ongoing mobilities and the deserving self: the case of Don Rodrigo de Vivero Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Nino Vallen
ABSTRACT Few sixteenth- and seventeenth-century creoles lived a life as mobile as don Rodrigo de Vivero y Aberruza. Born in Tecamachalco (Puebla) in 1564, he travelled to the Spanish court at the age of twelve. After his return to New Spain in 1580, he fought against the Chichimeca in New Mexico and against English pirates in Acapulco, served as interim governor in Manila and spent a year in Japan
-
“Too many cooperatives and too few cooperativists”: the consumer cooperative movement in Catalonia 1898–1939 Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-26 Jason Garner
ABSTRACT This article charts the evolution of the Catalan Cooperative movement from the creation of the first regional organisation, the Chamber of Catalan and Balearic Cooperatives in 1898, to the end of the Civil War in 1939. It looks at the aims of the Chamber and its successor organisation the Federation of Catalan Cooperatives, as expressed at congresses and in the movement’s press and then analyses
-
The political language of love in Guaraní in the missions of Paraguay (1750–1810) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-26 Capucine Boidin
ABSTRACT Our hypothesis is that in Paraguay’s Jesuit missions the Indian authorities, whose language was Guaraní, identified the medieval political concept of love with their own conceptions of ownership and possession of others, while the Jesuits thought they had found the exact equivalent of their conceptions of love in the Guaraní verb ayhu. We show that this was a case of “double mistaken identity
-
“The poor were slaves, and the rich masters.” The political concept of the people in the Spanish-American press discourse in times of Independence Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-14 Daniel Morán
ABSTRACT The commemoration of the bicentennial of the independence of Latin America has meant and important renewal in the historiography. Political and cultural history and its links with conceptual history have provided us with novel interpretations. Within these perspectives this research aims to analyze the political uses of the concept of people during the war of independence in the Spanish-American
-
Preach, teach, sing and dance: towards the configuration of a modern political language in the Basque tongue (1813–1833) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Javier Esteban-Ochoa-De-Eribe
ABSTRACT At the dawn of the nineteenth century, the Basque language, or Euskera, was eminently popular. The vast majority of written works in the language were religious books. This would change significantly throughout the first third of the century with a notable increase in the number of texts in this language and a change in content; published texts were political or written with, and about, hymns
-
Social practices of representation: pronunciamientos in Mexico at the beginning of republican life Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-11 Silke Hensel
ABSTRACT In Mexico, as in all of Spanish America, independence from Spain was followed by a period of political instability. This instability was related, in particular, to the need to find new forms of and procedures for political decision-making and ways to create new political identities given the rise of new concepts such as national sovereignty, representation and the general will in the era of
-
Politics, morals and politicisation in the eighteenth-century Spanish monarchy. The creation of a public sphere and its enemies Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-07 Andoni Artola, José María Imízcoz
ABSTRACT This paper examines the politicisation process that took place in the Hispanic monarchy towards the end of the Ancien Régime, with a special focus on analysing the actors involved in the Bourbon reformism. Our approach enables us to overcome the “upward politicisation/downward politicisation” dichotomy which is commonplace in current historiography. Based on this approach, we propose to reconstruct
-
The backgrounds of the Spanish Revolution of 1868: Civic Celebrations and Popular Politics Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-07 Jesús Cruz
ABSTRACT The political process that led to the Gloriosa Revolution of September 1868 in Spain has been sufficiently studied. We also know well the ideological foundations, the connection with the economic situation, and the social composition of the groups behind the revolution. What is less known are some of the mobilization dynamics used by the Progressive Party and the groups to its left to carry
-
INTRODUCTION: Popular politics in the Hispanic monarchy. Discourses, spaces and social actors (1700-1868) Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-07 Javier Esteban-Ochoa-de-Eribe
Published in Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (Vol. 28, No. 2, 2022)
-
Representations of Germany in Spain During World War II. a Microhistorical Study Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Guillermo Marín
ABSTRACT This text analyses the pro-German propaganda conducted in Spain during World War II. To this end, and in the first instance, the article provides a broad contextualization of the cultural, political, military and economic links that existed between Spain and Germany prior to the war. Moreover, it analyses ideas around Europe that had developed prior to 1933, as predecessors to the project
-
Medical anarchists and Masculine domination between 1872 and 1914: Masculine domination in transnational networks and masculinity models in the Spanish medical anarchists José García Viñas and Luis Bulffi Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Alicia Marchand Fernández
ABSTRACT This article focuses on two publications by Spanish anarchist doctors: Apuntes para el estudio médico-higiénico de la miseria (1877) by José García Viñas, and ¡Huelga de vientres! (1904) by Luis Bulffi. The paper sets out to analyze these sources considering how male domination social and symbolic structures were perpetuated within medical, anarchist, and neo-Malthusian transnational networks
-
Introduction: new directions in Spanish anarchist studies Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-04-03 Nathaniel Andrews, Richard Cleminson
ABSTRACT This introductory essay discusses some of the key developments that have occurred in the field of Spanish anarchist studies over the last few decades; a field that, unfortunately, remains somewhat marginalised in the academe. In particular, this piece highlights current trends in the relevant historiography, and emphasises the importance of this research to a wide range of fields and disciplines
-
Anarchism and modernity in nineteenth-century Spain Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Carme Bernat Mateu
ABSTRACT This article analyses the relationship between anarchism and modernity, paying specific attention to the tensions and paradoxes that arose between the two. The central thesis of this piece is that within nineteenth-century Spanish anarchism, a modernity-anti-modernity tension operated, enforced by the modern imaginary while also trying to transcend and end it. The original responses of anarchism
-
The communes as the counter-cultural alternative to the family within the Spanish democratic transition (1968-1986): an ontological approach Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Luis Toledo Machado
ABSTRACT This article focuses on the creation of communes within the last years of Franco’s dictatorship and Spain’s transition to democracy (1968–1986). Specifically, it analyses why some self-considered counter-cultural and young people conceived the communes as an alternative to the family in a general debate about social organization. Responding to an ontological turn in history, the article shows
-
Naturism as an experience through oral history Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Miguel Asensio
ABSTRACT With this study we intend to explore the impact of naturism on the Valencian anarcho-syndicalist power base in the 1920s and 1930s. The methodology used in this article has been oral history, since we consider this as the most useful to access the ways of understanding reality, as represented by historical actors. In fact, we have analysed unpublished oral sources to examine the processes