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El. knyga: Popular Memory and Franco's 'Disappeared' in Spain: Telling Stories of Mourning, Resistance, and Activism

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Francie Cates Popular Memory and Francos Disappeared is an obra magistral, an opus magnum, a masterwork. It is an in-depth and broad study in which further research on memory, imposed forgetting, counter-memory, and the dynamics of cultural memory will be rooted.





Maureen Tobin Stanley, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA





This book examines a "people's history" of the Spanish Civil War's anti-fascists who lost their 1936-1939 fight against far right military insurgents. The book argues that the regimes disappeared have in fact since 1936 been the most visible protagonists safeguarded in the shared collective memory of the wars losers. Narratives about Francos up to 150,000 civilian shooting victimsstories told in the form of memoirs, political speeches, visual art, film, novels, and oral testimoniesform the centerpiece of this study. How have these narratives told by the wars losers--focused explicitly on the figure of the dead bodybeen mobilized in periods of political upheaval from 1936 to the present, including WWII; the 1950s and 60s of the Cold War; the 1970s and 80s Spanish Transition; ongoing mass media culture wars that have polarized the Right and the Left since public exhumations of unmarked graves began in the year 2000?





Through fieldwork in the province of Cįdiz, the authorhas also recorded interviews with family members of citizens who were murdered. Through oral narratives, an entire communityviolently punished during the years of the dictatorshipsucceeded in keeping alive an alternative history of the pre-war enterprise to establish the 1931 Spanish democratic Republic and to build a modern nation bound by constitutional law. The discursive commonalities identified in the wide-ranging testimoniesincluding pioneering researchers publications beginning in the 1970sconstitute a fascinating textual topography of popular cultural memory. This book argues that this treasure trove of storytelling preserved an initially clandestine counter narrative of anti-Francoist resistance, as well as dreams of justice for the dead.





 





 





 





 
Part I: Representations of the Murdered Body of the Wars Losers: The
Discursive Life and Death of Amparo Barayon: A Case Study.
Chapter 1: Claims
of Crimes Against Civilians for an International Audience, 1936-1946.-
Chapter 2: Blood and Song: Creative Forms in Exile for Mourning the Dead,
1946-1959.
Chapter 3: Bodies in Transition during the Post-Franco Period:
Buried Truths in Spain.
Chapter 4: The Polemics of Breaking Family Silences:
Ramon Sender Barayons Return to the Scene of the Crime.- Part II: Francos
Fusilados and Popular Memory: Tearful Topographies of Political Dissidence.-
Chapter 5: The Politics of Mourning in the Postwar: State Spectacles & Small
Circles of Sorrow.
Chapter 6: A Testimonial Typology: Charting Francos
Repression in the Popular Imaginary of Andalucia.
Chapter 7: Recording
Twenty-first Century Oral Narratives in the Province of Cadiz.- Part III:
From Private Pain to Political Activism: Exhuming the Remains of Franco
Repression in the Province of Cadiz.
Chapter 8: The Political Passage from
Personal Grief to Collective Agency: Government-Sponsored Projects to Unearth
Hidden Histories.
Chapter 9: Affective Ties, Political Bonds, and Media
Visibility: Reclaiming the Spaces of History in Puerto Real and El Marrufo-La
Sauceda.
Chapter 10: Memory Associations and Activism: A Case Study of
AMEDE, San Fernando.
Chapter 11: Conclusion: Traces, Sites, and Sounds of
Franco Repression in the Popular Imaginary.
Francie Cate is Chair of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures and William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Hispanic Studies at William & Mary, USA. She is the Editor of the book series, Faro de la Memoria (University of Cįdiz Press). She is the author of Spanish Culture Behind Barbed Wire: Memory and Representation of the French Concentration Camps, 1939-1945 (2004), published in Spanish in 2012.