Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy Free

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy Free FREE JUAN CARLOS: STEERING SPAIN FROM DICTATORSHIP TO DEMOCRACY PDF Paul Preston | 624 pages | 15 Aug 2005 | HarperCollins Publishers | 9780006386933 | English | London, United Kingdom Paul Preston. Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy Ever since the Middle Ages, Spanish history has been a deeply polemical field. Preston, professor of international history at the London School of Economics, is one of a coterie of English-speaking historians of Spain whose reputation for objectivity has gained them intense admiration among the Spanish public. Following his definitive biography of the dictator Franco, Preston now turns his attention to the man Franco chose to perpetuate his repressive regime, the grandson of King Alfonso XIII. Juan Carlos, with his soldierly temperament and his taste for women and fast cars, was widely perceived as Franco's stooge and an intellectual mediocrity. Preston, however, a self-confessed pragmatist, is thoroughly sympathetic, presenting his subject as an intelligent patriot, repeatedly sacrificing personal happiness in long-term pursuit of democracy. In the pivotal years after Franco's death inJuan Carlos pacified the left, legalizing the Communist Party and bringing the socialists around to the cause of a constitutional monarchy. At the same time, the king desperately attempted to limit the fallout from attacks by the Basque terrorist group ETA and partially defused the threat of military conspiracy. While unable to avoid the attempted coup ofhe was, in Preston's view, undoubtedly instrumental in its failure, preventing a bloodbath and a second civil war. The warmth of Preston's respect for the king will be a surprise to some, but is well supported by the Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy in this exhaustive and compelling book, which should be read by anyone with an interest in contemporary Europe. Agent, Andrew Wylie. View Full Version of PW. Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy By and About This Author. Buy this book. Show other formats. Discover what to read next. PW Picks: Books of the Week. The Big Indie Books of Fall Black-Owned Bookstores to Support Now. Children's Announcements. The Spanish Transition to Democracy | Tavaana Spain : Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy to Democracy by Juan P. Fusi; Raymond Carr. Skip to main content. Email to friends Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or tab. Add to Watchlist. People who viewed this item also viewed. Picture Information. Have one to sell? Sell now - Have one to sell? Get the item you ordered or get your money back. Learn more - eBay Money Back Guarantee - opens in Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy window or tab. Seller information greatbookprices1 Contact seller. Visit store. See other items More See all. Item Information Condition:. List price:. What does this price mean? You save:. Sign in to check out Check out as guest. The item you've selected was not added to your cart. Add to Watchlist Unwatch. Watch list is full. Shipping help - opens a layer International Shipping - items may be subject to customs processing Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy on the item's customs value. Your country's customs office can offer more details, or visit eBay's page on international trade. Item location:. Jessup, Maryland, United States. Ships to:. This amount is subject to change until you make payment. For additional information, see the Global Shipping Program terms and conditions - opens in a new window or tab This amount includes applicable customs duties, taxes, brokerage and other fees. For additional information, see the Global Shipping Program terms and conditions - opens in a new window or tab. Estimated between Wed. This item has an extended handling time and a delivery estimate greater than 13 business days. Please allow additional time if international delivery is subject to customs processing. Special financing available. Earn up to 5x points when you use your eBay Mastercard. Learn more. Any international shipping and import charges are paid in part to Pitney Bowes Inc. Learn More - opens in a new window or tab International shipping and import charges paid to Pitney Bowes Inc. Learn More - opens in a new window or tab Any international shipping and import charges are paid in part to Pitney Bowes Inc. Learn More - opens in a new window or tab Any international shipping is paid in part to Pitney Bowes Inc. Learn More - opens in a new window or tab. Sponsored items from this seller Feedback on our suggestions - Sponsored items from this seller. Last one. Almost gone. Add to cart to save with this special offer. If you Buy It Now, you'll only be purchasing this item. If you'd like to get the additional items you've selected to qualify for this offer, close this window and add these items to your cart. Buy only this item Close this window. Report item - opens in a new window or tab. Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing. Item specifics Condition: Like New: A book that looks new but has been read. Cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket if applicable is included for hard covers. May be very minimal identifying marks on the inside cover. Very minimal wear and tear. See Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy condition definitions - opens in a new window or tab Read more about the condition. Shipping and handling. This item will ship to Germanybut the seller has not specified shipping options. Contact the seller - opens in a new window or tab and request a shipping method to your location. Shipping cost cannot be calculated. Please enter a valid ZIP Code. Shipping to: Americas, Europe, Japan, Australia. No additional import charges at delivery! This item will be shipped through the Global Shipping Program and includes international tracking. Learn more - opens in a new window or tab. There are 2 items available. Please enter a number less than or equal to 2. Select a valid country. Please enter 5 or 9 numbers for the ZIP Code. Delivery times may vary, especially during peak periods. Handling time. Will ship within 5 business days of receiving cleared payment. The seller has specified an extended handling Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy for this item. Taxes may be applicable at checkout. Return policy. Refer to eBay Return policy for more details. You are covered by the Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy Money Back Guarantee if you receive an item that is not as described in the listing. Payment details. Payment methods. Other offers may also be available. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the balance is not paid in full within 6 months. Minimum monthly payments are required. Subject to credit approval. See terms. Back to home page. Listed in category:. Email to friends Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or tab Add to Watchlist. Opens image gallery Image not available Photos not available for this variation. Like New: A book that looks new but has been read. Special financing available Select PayPal Credit at checkout to have the option to pay over time. Juan Carlos: steering Spain from dictatorship to democracy - LSE Research Online Pre-order Books. Order now from our extensive selection of books coming soon with Pre-order Price Guarantee. If the Amazon. Shop Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy. Customers who viewed this item also viewed. Page 1 of 1 Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy over Page 1 of 1. Previous page. Paul Preston. Only 2 left in stock. Only 3 left in stock. Raymond Carr. In stock on October 28, Next page. Start reading Juan Carlos on your Kindle in under a minute. Don't Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy a Kindle? Customer reviews. How are ratings calculated? Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness. Review this product Share your thoughts with other customers. Write a customer review. Top reviews Most recent Top reviews. Top reviews from Australia. There are 0 reviews and 0 ratings from Australia. Top reviews from other countries. Verified Purchase. This is history written with great flair. He takes us through his nomination as official successor to Franco to his eventual coronation as King and his progress thereafter. Preston's research is impressive and his ability to communicate in a highly readable style equally so. He is not entirely uncritical but has an obvious regard for his subject. Franco's aim was to produce a monarchical successor in his own image who would carry on the policies of his dictatorship, the movimiento. Juan Carlos' secular, religious and military education was guided to that effect. One has sympathy for the rather lonely life led by Juan Carlos as a young boy and teenager surrounded by dry and traditionalist courtiers and teachers. His contact with his family was minimal and his relationship with his father could hardly be described as warm although he himself was full of filial respect. Juan Carlos was an attentive student at more than his formal studies and had a clear understanding of how he needed to behave to ensure he was nominated as successor to Franco and later as King. He relished his military training and formed close bonds with fellow cadets and officers that would stand him in good stead later when he had to deal with a military class accustomed to dominating political life.
Recommended publications
  • Paul Preston. Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy
    Paul Preston. Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy . New York and London: W. W. Norton and Company, 2004, 608 pp. by Lynn Purkey Paul Preston, a distinguished historian in the field of twentieth century Spain, has written a timely and engaging new biography Juan Carlos: Steering Spain from Dicta­ torship to Democracy. The book is an insightful and often probing biography of this visionary King, while also tracing Spain’s transition from fascism to democracy during the tenuous period following Francisco Franco’s death (1975). Divided into eleven chronologically arranged chapters, the text is followed by an extensive bibliography, endnotes and an index. Moreover, the impeccably researched work boasts a wealth of interviews and private correspondence as well as the usual bibliography. In addition to being of interest to Hispanists and historians, Juan Carlos appeals to the casual reader, since it is an intensely personal look at Juan Carlos and other members of the House of Borbon, as well as being an emi­ nently readable text. Juan Carlos begins by recounting the history of the exiled royal family during the Second Republic (1931-1936) and the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), during which Juan Carlos was born (1938). It further catalogues the political intrigues and machinations that characterize the tense relationship between Franco and the exiled King Alfonso XIII (1886-1941), and his heir Don Juan de Borbon (1913-1993). whom Franco excluded from rule with the passage of the Law of Succession, which granted the dictator the right to choose his own successor. One of the author’s key contentions is the royal family’s dedication to service above personal considerations, which has been a hallmark of Juan Carlos’s up­ bringing and indeed his reign as King of Spain.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spanish Communist Party in the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), Vol
    The Defence of Madrid: The Spanish Communist Party in the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), Vol. Amanda Marie Spencer Ph. D. History Department of History, University of Sheffield June 2006 i Contents: - List of plates iii List of maps iv Summary v Introduction 5 1 The PCE during the Second Spanish Republic 17 2 In defence of the Republic 70 3 The defence of Madrid: The emergence of communist hegemony? 127 4 Hegemony vs. pluralism: The PCE as state-builder 179 5 Hegemony challenged 229 6 Hegemony unravelled. The demise of the PCE 274 Conclusion 311 Appendix 319 Bibliography 322 11 Plates Between pp. 178 and 179 I PCE poster on military instruction in the rearguard (anon) 2a PCE poster 'Unanimous obedience is triumph' (Pedraza Blanco) b PCE poster'Mando Unico' (Pedraza Blanco) 3 UGT poster'To defend Madrid is to defend Cataluna' (Marti Bas) 4 Political Commissariat poster'For the independence of Spain' (Renau) 5 Madrid Defence Council poster'First we must win the war' (anon) 6a Political Commissariat poster Training Academy' (Canete) b Political Commissariat poster'Care of Arms' (anon) 7 lzquierda Republicana poster 'Mando Unico' (Beltran) 8 Madrid Defence Council poster'Popular Army' (Melendreras) 9 JSU enlistment poster (anon) 10 UGT/PSUC poster'What have you done for victory?' (anon) 11 Russian civil war poster'Have you enlisted as a volunteer?' (D.Moor) 12 Poster'Sailors of Kronstadt' (Renau) 13 Poster 'Political Commissar' (Renau) 14a PCE Popular Front poster (Cantos) b PCE Popular Front poster (Bardasano) iii Maps 1 Central Madrid in 1931 2 Districts of Madrid in 1931 2 3 Province of Madrid 3 4 District of Cuatro Caminos 4 iv Summary The role played by the Spanish Communist Party (Partido Comunista de Espana, PCE) during the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39 remains controversial to this day.
    [Show full text]
  • Currículum Vitae Del Dr. Paul Preston (Liverpool, 1946)
    CURRÍCULUM VITAE DEL DR. PAUL PRESTON (LIVERPOOL, 1946) Trajectòria acadèmica L’any 1968 es va llicenciar en Lletres, el 1969 va obtenir el màster i l’any 1975 es va doctorar. Entre el 1973 i el 1975 va exercir com a professor d’Història a la Universitat de Reading (Anglaterra). Posteriorment i fins a l’any 1985 fou professor al Queen Mary College de la Universitat de Londres. Entre el 1985 i el 1991 fou catedràtic d’Història Contemporània i degà de la Facultat de Lletres al Queen Mary College de la Universitat de Londres, i entre els anys 1991 i 1994 va exercir com a catedràtic d’Història Internacional a la London School of Economics & Political Science, on també va dirigir el Departament d’Història Internacional. Des de l’any 1994 fins ara ha estat catedràtic Príncep d’Astúries d’Història Contemporània Espanyola i director del Centre Cañada Blanch d’Estudis de l’Espanya Contemporània de la London School of Economics & Political Science. Reconeixements i premis - Comanador de l’Orden de Mérito Civil, Espanya (1986) - Fellow of the British Academy (acadèmic de l’Acadèmia Britànica) (1994) - Premi Así fue - la Historia rescatada amb el llibre Las tres Españas del 36 (Plaza y Janés, Barcelona, 1998) - Comandant de l’Order of the British Empire (2000) - Premi Internacional Ramon Llull 2005 - Membre de l’Acadèmia Europea de Yuste, amb la Càtedra Marcel Proust (2006) - Premi Trias Fargas d’assaig pel llibre Idealistes sota les bales. Històries de la guerra civil (Barcelona: Proa Editorial, 2007) - Gran Cruz de la Orden de Isabel la Católica
    [Show full text]
  • Labour Movements and Memories of Spain
    Labour Movements and Memories of Spain Chris McConville Australian Studies, University of the Sunshine Coast Peter O'Connor died in June this year. O'Connor had fought in the Socialists, for example, praised Loach for his attack on Stalinism, International Brigades in Spain, joined the IRA, and helped refound and then returned to the charges made in Screen and at Edinburgh the Communist Party of Ireland. A requiem mass for the old nearly a quarter of a century earlier. Loach remained prisoner to the communist was held in the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in 'dead weight of empiricism' and 'confused passivity in the face of Waterford.! Funerals for civil war volunteers like O'Connor occur difficult dramatic choices with "letting events flOW"'.5 Before the from time to time around the globe. They are occasions to be film's showing at the West Belfast Film festival, Mick O'Riordan, remarked on as oddities in the local press [a communist funeral in a who, a few years later, was to deliver the oration at Peter O'Connor's cathedral in Ireland!] and which, momentarily, draw together the funeral, called the film, a 'grotesque distortion', a response echoed remnant left of the inter-war labour movement. by former Brigadistas around the globe.6 Such funerals apart, the Spanish Revolution and Civil War rarely Historians too took Loach to task for making a film unlocated in evoke either faith or solidarity. For the labour movements most any Spanish historical context. For all Loach's courage in making a enmeshed in the Spanish struggle of the 1930s, the sixtieth difficult movie for a popular audience and despite the continuities anniversary of Franco's victory, which passed on 31 March this year, he demonstrated between fascism and contemporary neo-liberalism, has meant little.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spanish Civil War (1936–39)
    12 CIVIL WAR CASE STUDY 1: THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR (1936–39) ‘A civil war is not a war but a sickness,’ wrote Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. ‘The enemy is within. One fights almost against oneself.’ Yet Spain’s tragedy in 1936 was even greater. It had become enmeshed in the international civil war, which started in earnest with the Bolshevik revolution. From Antony Beevor, The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936–1939 , 2006 The Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936 after more than a century of social, economic and political division. Half a million people died in this conflict between 1936 and 1939. As you read through this chapter, consider the following essay questions: Ģ Why did a civil war break out in Spain in 1936? Ģ How significant was the impact of foreign involvement on the outcome of the Spanish Civil War? General Francisco Franco, the Ģ What were the key effects of the Spanish Civil War? leader who took Nationalist forces to victory in the Spanish Civil War. Timeline of events – 1820–1931 1820 The Spanish Army, supported by liberals, overthrows the absolute monarchy and makes Spain a constitutional monarchy in a modernizing revolution 1821 Absolute monarchy is restored to Spain by French forces in an attempt to reinstate the old order 1833 In an attempt to prevent a female succession following the death of King Ferdinand, there is a revolt by ‘Carlists’. The army intervenes to defeat the Carlists, who nevertheless remain a strong conservative force in Spanish politics (see Interesting Facts box) 1833–69 The army’s influence in national politics increases during the ‘rule of the Queens’ 1869–70 Anarchist revolts take place against the state 1870–71 The monarchy is overthrown and the First Republic is established 1871 The army restores a constitutional monarchy 1875–1918 During this period the constitutional monarchy allows for democratic elections.
    [Show full text]
  • The Monumentalization of the Spanish Civil War
    Wesleyan University The Honors College How Spain Sees its Past: The Monumentalization of the Spanish Civil War by Lynn Cartwright-Punnett Class of 2007 A thesis submitted to the faculty of Wesleyan University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts with Departmental Honors in History and Iberian Studies Middletown, Connecticut April 2007 Acknowledgments Very special thanks to all the experts who have helped me in the formation of this work: Nathanael Greene, who assigned Homage to Catalonia freshman year and advised me senior year; Carmen Moreno-Nuño and Montserrat Iglesias Santos, who led me to historical memory of the Spanish Civil War; Phillip Wagoner, who introduced me to the concept of lieux de mémoire; and Antonio González, who helped me with Lorca and all things Iberian. Thanks to the Davenport Committee for enabling me to do research over the summer, and to Jaime Lipton, Cuchi Pereyra, Katherine Halper, Emilio Silva, Jesús de Andrés, and Beatriz de las Heras Herrero who helped me while there. Thanks to Erhard Konerding who supplied me with feedback and puns. To Katie Barnett and Meg Adams for going to the NYU conference with me. To CML, because he was willing to be acknowledged. To every member of my family who clipped newspaper articles and sent them to me; even if I didn’t end up using them, they were always appreciated. Thanks to Fran for always being ready to drop everything and help me de-stress. Thanks to Gavin and Judith, whose work on their theses kept me honest.
    [Show full text]
  • Paul Preston Lecture Day on Studying the Spanish Civil War and Understanding Spain Today
    ¡NO PASARÁN! International Brigade Memorial Trust G 2-2018 G £5 Meet the last survivor Is this Gerda Taro? At the IBMT Paul Preston lecture day on studying the Spanish Civil war and understanding Spain today ¡No pasarán! # INTERVIEW Paul Preston is recognised as the world’s foremost historian of the Spanish Civil War. His prolific output of books, stretching back over four decades, has played an important role in raising and reshaping public perceptions of the war and 20th century Spain. In this exclusive interview for the IBMT, he talks at length about his personal commitment to unearthing and explaining what happened before, during and after the civil war and why those events still cast such a shadow over modern Spain. Born in Liverpool in 1946, Paul Preston is Professor of Spanish History at the London School of Economics, where he is the director of the Cañada Blanch Centre for Contemporary Spanish Studies. He is also the Founding Chair of the IBMT, having chaired the initial meetings in 2000 that brought together International Brigade veterans, families, friends and historians to create the International Brigade Memorial Trust. His latest book is ‘The Last Days of the Spanish Republic’ (2017). Among others are ‘The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain’ (2012), ‘We Saw Spain Die: Foreign Correspondents in the Spanish Civil War’ (2008), ‘The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution and Revenge’ (2006), ‘Doves of War: Four Women of Spain’ (2002)’, ‘¡Comrades! Portraits from the Spanish Civil War’ (1999), ‘A Concise History of the Spanish Civil War’ (1996) and ‘The Coming of the Spanish Civil War: Reform, Reaction and Revolution in the Second Republic 1931-1936’ (1978).
    [Show full text]
  • Preston, Paul, the Coming of the Spanish Civil War: Reform, Reaction and Revolution in the Second
    THE COMING OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR The breakdown of democracy in Spain in the 1930s resulted in a torrent of political and military violence. In this thoroughly revised edition of his classic text, Paul Preston provides a deeply disturbing explanation of the democratic collapse, coherently and excitingly outlining the social and economic background. Spain was a backward agricultural country divided by the most brutal economic inequalities. The coming of the Second Republic in April 1931 was greeted by the Left as an opportunity to reform Spain’s antiquated social structure. Over the next two years, the Socialist members of a Republican—Socialist coalition pushed for reforms to alleviate the day-to- day misery of the great southern army of landless labourers. Paul Preston shows how the political activities of the Right, legal and conspiratorial, between 1931 and 1936, as well as the subsequent Nationalist war effort, were primarily a response to these reforming ambitions of the Left. His principal argument is that, although the Spanish Civil War encompassed many separate conflicts, the main cause of the breakdown of the Second Republic was the struggle between Socialists and the legalist Right to impose their respective views of social organisation on Spain by means of their control of the apparatus of state. The incompatible interests represented by these two mass parliamentary parties—those of the landless labourers and big landlords, of industrialists and workers—spilled over into social conflicts which could not be contained within the parliamentary arena. Since the first edition of this book was completed more than fifteen years ago, archives have been opened up, the diaries, letters and memoirs of major protagonists have been published, and there have been innumerable studies of the politics of the Republic, of parties, unions, elections and social conflict, both national and provincial.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spanish Civil War—Inter Armas Pugnant Leges
    Chapter 4 The Spanish Civil War—Inter Armas Pugnant Leges Non-Intervention in the ‘Last Great Cause’ On July 18th 1936, a day that will be celebrated for four decades in Spain as the day of the ‘glorious national uprising’, Francisco Franco, the youngest European general of his day, who had already distinguished himself as a bold and cold-blooded officer in the Spanish colonial campaigns in North Africa,1 joined a military uprising against the Second Spanish Republic. On 15th August 1936, less than a month after Franco launched his anti-Republican ‘national crusade in defence of the Western Christian civilization and against Communist barbarism’, Britain and France instituted with an exchange of notes an international agreement of non-intervention in Spain.2 on 21st July 1936, the French Front Populaire government, led by Leon Blum, had responded favourably to the Spanish Republic’s requests for importation of war material, but it provisionally halted exports to Spain on 27th July.3 The non-intervention agreement of 15th August 1936 enshrined a French neutralist readjustment under the influence of both domestic political factors and British diplomatic pressure.4 It was a hard blow for the besieged Spanish Republic. Despite the logistical aid the insurgents had received from Hitler’s Germany on 26th July5 1 On General Francisco Franco, see e.g. Paul Preston, Franco. A Bibliography (London: Harper Press 1995). 2 See e.g. Fernando Schwartz, La internacionalización de la guerra civil española, (Barcelona: Ariel 1971). 3 The literature on the French ‘change of mind’ is very extensive e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Catholicism in Spain's Second Republic
    POLITICAL CATHOLICISM IN SPAIN’S SECOND REPUBLIC (1931–1936): THE CONFEDERACIÓN ESPAÑOLA DE DERECHAS AUTÓNOMAS IN MADRID, SEVILLE, AND TOLEDO By SAMUEL M. PIERCE A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2007 1 © 2007 Samuel M. Pierce 2 For Laura and Abbie Tough 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My advisor, George Esenwein, provided much support and advice as I worked to complete this study. I am grateful for his time, counsel, and occasional prodding, which have helped to improve its quality immeasurably. My original committee members, Tim Rees, Thomas Gallant, Brian Ward and Montserrat Alás-Brún, all contributed significantly to my intellectual development. I thank Peter Bergmann and Robert Zieger for stepping in to replace Professors Gallant and Ward, who left Florida for positions in other departments. Geraldine Nichols stepped in very late to replace Professor Alás-Brún, whose serious illness made it impossible for her to continue in her role. Michael Seidman, Nigel Townson, and Martin Blinkhorn for their helpful discussions. In Spain, I must especially thank Julio Gil Pecharromán whose kind guidance helped me navigate the paths of Spanish archives. José Ramón Montero also took time from his busy schedule to meet with me, and Leandro Alvarez Rey provided helpful guidance in Seville. The research and writing of this study were partially financed by the Fulbright Commission and the University of Florida Department of History. In addition, the Fulbright Commission helped my family find its way in Spain. The staffs of the various archives I consulted provided valuable assistance in accessing key source material.
    [Show full text]
  • Impact Case Study (Ref3b) Page 1 Institution
    Impact case study (REF3b) Institution: London School of Economics and Political Science Unit of Assessment: 30: History Title of case study: The politics of memory: changing how Spain’s recent history is perceived 1. Summary of the impact (indicative maximum 100 words) Professor Paul Preston’s work on the causes, course and long-term legacy of the Spanish Civil War (1936-9) has significantly influenced developments and activities in three areas: 1. Civil Society: supporting the activities of NGOs and civic associations working to quantify, catalogue and commemorate the victims of the Francoist repression, thus contributing to processes of collective commemoration and memorialisation; 2. Public Discourse: stimulating public debate in Spain, the UK and other countries over the historical origins of key political divisions within present-day Spain; 3. Education: stimulating awareness within the educational sector of Spain’s recent, violent past. 2. Underpinning research (indicative maximum 500 words) Research Insights and Outputs: Preston has published 5 key books during the REF period. The first two are: Juan Carlos. Steering Spain from Dictatorship to Democracy [1]; and The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution, Revenge [2], a widely acclaimed account of the origins, development and long-term consequences of the Spanish civil war. We Saw Spain Die: Foreign Correspondents in the Spanish Civil War [3], is a reconstruction of the objectives and impact of the foreign press in the war, and the difficulties they faced. It is based on a huge quantity of diaries, letters and other papers from correspondents in twenty-one different archives in Spain, the UK and the USA, as well as hundreds of press articles written by them; a substantial amount of memoir material; and interviews with the few surviving witnesses.
    [Show full text]
  • Raymond Carr (1919–2015)
    Paul Preston Raymond Carr (1919–2015) Article (Accepted version) (Refereed) Original citation: Preston Paul, (2017). Raymond Carr (1919–2015). Bulletin of Spanish Studies 94 (3). pp. 527- 533. ISSN 1475-3820 DOI: 10.1080/14753820.2017.1307595 © 2017 Bulletin of Spanish Studies This version available at: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/70918/ Available in LSE Research Online: August 2017 LSE has developed LSE Research Online so that users may access research output of the School. Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in LSE Research Online to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. You may not engage in further distribution of the material or use it for any profit-making activities or any commercial gain. You may freely distribute the URL (http://eprints.lse.ac.uk) of the LSE Research Online website. This document is the author’s final accepted version of the journal article. There may be differences between this version and the published version. You are advised to consult the publisher’s version if you wish to cite from it. Raymond Carr (1919–2015)* PAUL PRESTON London School of Economics and Political Science One of Britain’s greatest historians, the intellectual and literary heir to Richard Ford and Gerald Brenan, died on 19 April 2015. Sir Raymond Carr, born Albert Raymond Maillard Carr on 11 April 1919 in Bath, was the grandson of a blacksmith and the son of Reginald Carr, a village schoolmaster in Dorset, and of Ethel Graham, who worked in the village post office.
    [Show full text]