توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Spain: Inventing the Nation
نام کتاب : Spain: Inventing the Nation
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اسپانیا: اختراع ملت
سری :
نویسندگان : Carsten Humlebæk
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2014
تعداد صفحات : 273
ISBN (شابک) : 9781474210980 , 9781441141743
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover page\nHalftitle page\nSeries page\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nCONTENTS\nLIST OF ACRONYMS\nCHAPTER ONE Prologue: From present-day Spain back to the origins\n When to call an old state like Spain a nation?\nCHAPTER TWO An old state in a new era (1808–33): Planting the seed of the nation\n Proto-nationalism in Spain: the Spanish variant of Enlightenment\n Napoleonic invasion as the germ of the national idea\n Victory against the French\n Zigzagging between absolutism and liberal nationalism in the first half of the nineteenth century\nCHAPTER THREE The liberal Spanish nation (1834–75): In search of a mass audience\n The wrong experiences of war\n The ‘invention’ of two national histories\n Revolutionary outcomes of the stalemate between liberalism and conservative reaction (1868–74)\nCHAPTER FOUR The Restoration regime (1875–1923): The non-solution to the national problem(s)\n A marriage of convenience: The Restoration regime\n Setting the scene for national divisions of Spain\n Spain as an ex-colonial empire\n The appearance of alternative nations (Catalonia and the Basque Country)\n ‘Last-minute’ nation-building\n The liberal-conservative oligarchic Restoration regime’s fi nal crisis\nCHAPTER FIVE Military dictatorship (1923–31): A solution to the nationalization of the masses?\n Brief parenthesis or deep regeneration?\n The Catalan conjuncture\n The war in Morocco\n From parenthesis to regenerator\n Discourse on the nation and nationalization of the masses\n Parenthesis or precursor?\nCHAPTER SIX The Second Spanish Republic (1931–9): The short-lived success of the liberal national project\n Republican take over as victory of left-liberal discourse on the nation\n Republican government and Constitution as a reform programme\n The crumbling of the republican coalition and the unification of the conservative opposition\n The swing of the pendulum: the black ‘bienio’ , 1933–5\n The swing back: the Frente Popular\n The republican nation and its symbols\n Developing the authoritarian ideology in the shadow of the Republic\n Conclusions: the republican nation\nCHAPTER SEVEN The Civil War (1936–9): Military confrontation of the two national projects\n The uprising divides Spain\n International involvement in the war\n The Civil War as a conflict of different national narratives\n The results of the Civil War\nCHAPTER EIGHT The Franco regime (1939–75): Victory of the National-Catholic project\n Military victory of one national idea\n Post-war economy\n The Francoist national project\n Victory in symbols\n Out of isolation into the growth of the West\n Adapting the legitimization discourse and the symbols\n Division as the origin of consensus\nCHAPTER NINE The death of Franco: Solution and postponement\n The slow beginning of the transition\n Transition to democracy by reform from within\n The nation in transition: a unique opportunity of consensus\n ‘Unity of will’ not amalgamation\n Settling the national question anew: the Constitution of 1978\n National problems and tension between symmetry and asymmetry\nCHAPTER TEN The new democratic Spain: Mobilizing identities\n Identitarian mobilization in the periphery\n Mobilizing Spanish identity by reaction\n The discarded symbols and commemorations\n The ‘recycled’ commemorations\n The new commemorations\n The quest for identity of the ‘slow’-track regions\nCHAPTER ELEVEN The new European Spain: United and divisions forgotten?\n Agreement in positive and in negative\n Regional autonomy and democratic consolidation\n Continued economic crisis and Europe as solution in waiting\n The socialist decade\n Europe as solution to Spanish problems\nCHAPTER TWELVE The national holidays in democracy: Struggling national discourses\n Between the 23-F and the ‘era’ of the quincentennial\n From the popular celebration of the Constitution to the ‘puente de la Constitución’13\n A conflictual holiday\n The democratic Spanish nation and its symbolic impasse\nCHAPTER THIRTEEN The second turnover: Consolidating democracy\n The crisis of the socialist ‘system’\n In Europe and in the world\n Opposition grows\n Updating the Constitution?\n Post festum: the national symbols after the quincentennial\n Symbolic ‘rearmament’ under the PP\n The Spanish flag in the battlefield\n Updating the discourse on the Spanish nation\n From post festum decline to the nationalist ‘rearmament’ of the PP\nCHAPTER FOURTEEN Accommodating the past: Revisiting the historical master narrative\n Memory politics in Spain: the so-called Pact of Forgetting\n Legitimacy of the new democracy and the politics of the past\n The Spanish parties and the authoritarian past\n The left-wing parties and the tacit transition pact\n The ‘explosion’ of historical memory\n The ‘Law on Historical Memory’\n Memory politics as a constant\nCHAPTER FIFTEEN Accommodating nationalist pretensions: Is it possible?\n The constitutional postponement of the national problem\n The leverage of the Basques and the Catalans\n Identity politics and political elite vs public opinion\n Renegotiating autonomy\n The Ibarretxe Plan and the Catalan Statute of Autonomy\n The polarization of the Catalan situation\n The Constitutional Court ruling\n The post-sentence phase of Catalan independentismo\n The March towards Independence\n The Basques in the shadow of Catalonia – the slow route to independence?\n Constitutional reform as a solution?\nCHAPTER SIXTEEN Epilogue: Crisis and its effects on the national tensions\n Why is the crisis of Spain worse?\n Has the ‘autonomy spiral’ been broken by crisis?\n The EU and secessionist tendencies\n Can secessionism be avoided?\n Referendum – the fundamental question of demos\nNOTES\nBIBLIOGRAPHY\nINDEX