SANTIFICANDO UM REGIME: O CULTO AO DITADOR FRANCISCO FRANCO BAHAMONDE NA IGREJA PALMARIANA

Author(s):  
Pedro Luiz Câmara DANTAS
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-86
Author(s):  
Gloria Román Ruiz

The early 1960s in Spain saw the beginnings of a cycle of protest against the dictatorship of Francisco Franco that would end by rendering its continuity unviable after the dictator’s death in 1975. The process of building democracy was undertaken bidirectionally, both from ‘above’ and from ‘below’, and it involved multiple actors. This article pays special attention to those ‘democratizing agents’ in civil society who acted in the cultural and educational spheres, as teachers, students, protest singers or members of the cultural centres and neighbourhood associations that emerged at that time, especially in rural Andalusia. It argues that through day-to-day micro-conflicts and micro-mobilizations, those actors acquired and transmitted civic–democratic guidelines and values.


2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (57) ◽  
pp. 117-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Helena Rolim Capelato
Keyword(s):  

O regime franquista, sobretudo nas primeiras décadas, exerceu amplo controle sobre a educação, que ficou sob a responsabilidade dos nacionalistas católicos. Produziram-se inúmeros livros escolares infantis orientados por forte sentido patriótico e religioso. Os autores tinham como objetivo moldar as consciências mirins com base nos pressupostos básicos da mentalidade que dava sustentação ao regime: autoridade, hierarquia, ordem, obediência, temor e devoção a Deus e ao Chefe Francisco Franco. Este texto analisa o conteúdo dos livros destinados ao ensino primário, mostrando como eles foram instrumentos importantes de doutrinação infantil, marcada pela intolerância. O conteúdo e as imagens neles presentes contribuíram para construir uma identidade nacional excludente, a qual estimulava o heroísmo, o martírio, o sacrifício infantil e o ódio aos inimigos da religião e da "Madre España".


Cliocanarias ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-43
Author(s):  
Miguel Ángel Perfecto García ◽  

The regime of general Francisco Franco imposed a nationalist model from two ideological sources: the nationalcatholicism, an antiliberal proposal of the Catholic Church that identified Spain with catholicism; and the anti-liberal and fascist alternatives born in the heat of the European political-social crisis and Spanish of the First World War. The political model was strongly centralist, authoritarian and interventionist around Castile and the Castilian language, rejecting the other nationalist models. At the social level, the corporate proposal stood out by means of the compulsory framing of workers and businessmen in the Spanish Organización Sindical, the unique trade union of Francoism led by the unique party Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las JONS


Author(s):  
Mónica Gruber

La Guerra Civil fracturó indudablemente la sociedad española. Una guerra fratricida que sacudió desde los cimientos a todo el pueblo español. Todos y cada uno de los integrantes de la sociedad adoptaron una posición. Muertes, hambre y odio fueron los resultados. Los duros años posteriores estuvieron marcados a fuego por una larga dictadura que se extendería hasta 1975, año de la muerte de Francisco Franco. Como sucede luego de toda guerra y como en toda dictadura, la historia oficial, la de los vencedores, se impondría para construir un relato que sostuviese al Generalísimo en el poder. Pero ¿Qué sucedió con las voces de los vencidos? ¿Qué participación tuvieron las mujeres? En esta senda se encaminaron los pasos de la escritora española Dulce Chacón. Luego de cuatro años de entrevistas a lo largo de la península ibérica, nacía en el año 2002 su novela La voz dormida. En ella, narra la historia de las mujeres vencidas, torturadas, humilladas y ejecutadas en la cárcel de mujeres de Ventas, en Madrid. Basada sobre testimonios reales, se propone devolverles la palabra a las acalladas. De este modo, construye un friso colectivo poblado de convictas y carceleras que desnuda las miserias de la reclusión de la época del primer franquismo (Fontana, J., 1986, Tusell, J., 1996). Nos proponemos en este trabajo abordar la construcción de la imagen femenina en la novela para reflexionar acerca de las líneas de profundidad hermeneútica que articulan el relato y el contexto en el cual se desarrolla. Asimismo, analizaremos la transposición homónima del director español Benito Zambrano de 2011. Nos inquietan los cambios producto de las operaciones de trasvase, no sólo de un lenguaje a otro, sino las operaciones a nivel constructivo. ¿Puede un relato de mujeres narrado por una mujer conservar su esencia? ¿La factura de un director de género masculino modifica la mirada que le dio vida?


Author(s):  
Michael J. Bazyler ◽  
Kathryn Lee Boyd ◽  
Kristen L. Nelson ◽  
Rajika L. Shah

Spain is typically described as having been a neutral country during World War II. However, during the war, the Fascist ideology of Spain’s General Francisco Franco was closely aligned to that of the Nazis’ National Socialism. Unlike Hitler’s Germany, however, Franco’s Spain did not enact anti-Jewish policies or engage in the persecution of Jews. More than 25,000 Jews were able to escape Nazi-controlled Europe to Spain during the war. No immovable property—private, communal, or heirless—was taken from Jews or other targeted groups in Spain during the war. As a result, no immovable property restitution laws were required. Spain endorsed the Terezin Declaration in 2009 and the Guidelines and Best Practices in 2010.


Author(s):  
David Jones

Known as Il Duce (the Leader), the son of a Marxist blacksmith, Benito Mussolini was the ruler of Fascist Italy (1922–43). A master of populist rhetoric, editor of the socialist newspaper Avanti! (1912–1914), Mussolini shaped the fascist movement as a party leader before rising to state power with his October 1922 March on Rome. He invaded Ethiopia in a brutal war for a new Italian Empire (1935–36), aided Franco’s Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War (1936–39), and fought on the side of Nazi Germany in the Second World War (1940–45). His fascist ideology made use of ideas offered by Italy’s ‘philosopher of fascism’, Giovanni Gentile (1875–1944), and manifestos written by the founder of Futurism, poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1876–1944). Mussolini’s personality cult influenced dictators such as Adolf Hitler and Francisco Franco, and at times earned the admiration of Winston Churchill (Samuel) and Franklin Roosevelt (Schivelbusch, 2006, 31). On April 29, 1945, Mussolini was captured and executed, his body gruesomely displayed (‘Execution of Mussolini’). His legacy has spawned fascist movements throughout the world, from Oswald Mosley’s (1896–1980) English Blackshirts to Pierre Gemayel’s (1905–1984) Christian Phalange in Lebanon.


2019 ◽  
pp. 215-242
Author(s):  
Sasha D. Pack

This chapter examines the fate of trans-Gibraltar region during Spanish Civil War and the early stages of World War II. Although the insurgent army of Francisco Franco quickly took control of northern Morocco and southern Spain and invited its Nazi and Fascist allies to the strategically crucial region, the Entente order of 1904 proved resilient. New evidence is introduced detailing the Franco movement’s success in marshaling anti-French, anti-Semitic, and pro-German sentiments to recruit Muslim support, promising the construction of a new Hispano-Moroccan bulwark in the western Mediterranean. Other new documents indicate how quickly this enthusiasm cooled, however, as it became clear that Nazi agents were preparing to seize a position in northwest Africa without giving consideration for Spanish interests, while the British and much of the Jewish community of Tangier remained supportive of Spanish interests in Morocco.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (32) ◽  
pp. 204
Author(s):  
Ruben Serem
Keyword(s):  

http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7976.2014v21n32p204A Guerra Civil de Espanha (1936-1939), identificada por César Oliveira, o mais reputado hispanista português, como "a última das guerras político-ideológico-religiosas da Europa"[i], teve profundas repercussões internacionais, de Lisboa a Moscovo e, se incluirmos a participação das Brigadas Internacionais, de Havana a Xangai.[ii] Uma opinião partilhada pelo ditador português António de Oliveira Salazar, que famosamente definiu o conflito como "uma guerra internacional num campo de batalha nacional".[iii]De facto, para Salazar, a Guerra de Espanha apresentou-se como uma oportunidade única para radicalizar o Estado Novo, nascido de uma ditadura militar cuja génese foi o golpe de estado de 28 de Maio de 1926. Concomitantemente, o segundo (e não menos importante) objetivo do regime era substituir a jovem democracia espanhola, implantada em 1931, por um governo ideologicamente compatível com o Estado Novo. A vitória da autodenominada fação Nacionalista (uma nomenclatura que pressupunha que a República Espanhola era antipatriota), caudilhada pelo General Francisco Franco Bahamonde, foi fator determinante para a consolidação das ditaduras salazarista e franquista, que viriam a sobreviver ao colapso do fascismo europeu no pós-Segunda Guerra Mundial e perdurar até 1974, em Portugal, e 1975, em Espanha


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document