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Author:
Míguez Macho, Antonio, author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2012025465
Title:
The genocidal genealogy of Francoism : violence, memory and impunity / Antonio Miguez Macho.
Publisher:
Sussex Academic Press,
Copyright Date:
2016
Description:
xv, 154 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Subject:
Francoism--Historiography.
Political violence--Spain--History.
Political persecution--Spain--History.
Collective memory--Spain--History.
Genocide--History.
Spain--Atrocities.--Civil War, 1936-1939--Atrocities.
Spain--Historiography.--Civil War, 1936-1939--Historiography.
Spain--Psychological aspects.--Civil War, 1936-1939--Psychological aspects.
HISTORY--Europe--Spain & Portugal.
POLITICAL SCIENCE--Fascism & Totalitarianism.--Fascism & Totalitarianism.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 136-148) and index.
Summary:
"The Francoist command in the Spanish Civil War carried out a programme of mass violence from the start of the conflict. Through a combination of death squads and the use of military trials around 150,000 Spaniards met their deaths. Others perished in concentration camps and prisons. The terror took other forms, such as mass rape, extortion, "appropiation" of children and forced exile. The planned nature of this violence meant that the Francoists decided when the violence would begin, the way it would be carried out and when it would come to an end. This is a primary reason why the judicial concept of genocidal practice, alongside the use of comparative history, can furnish insights. The July 1936 uprising was not only aimed at ending the Republican regime, but had ideological goals: preventing the supposed Bolshevik Revolution, defending the 'unity of Spain' and reversing center-left social and cultural reforms. An over-arching objective was the elimination of a social group identified as 'an enemy of Spain' - a group defined as: not Catholic, not Spanish, not traditional. The genocidal intent of the coup via access to state resources, their monopoly of force in some territories and their subsequent victory ensured that the practice of genocide could be realized in the whole Spanish territory, permitting the hegemonic nature of the denialist discourse surrounding these crimes. Public debate over Francosim brings with it substantive disagreements. The Genocidal Genealogy of Francoism engages with the root causes of these disagreements"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
The Cañada Blanch/Sussex Academic studies on contemporary Spain
ISBN:
1845197496
9781845197490
OCLC:
(OCoLC)927141174
LCCN:
2015017395
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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