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The illusion of statehood: perceptions of Catalan independence up to the end of the Spanish Civil War
Hispanic Research Journal: Iberian and Latin American Studies, ISSN 1468-2737, Vol. 21, Nº 4, 2020, págs. 470-471
Bulletin of Spanish Studies, ISSN-e 1478-3428, ISSN 1475-3820, Vol. 97, Nº 10, 2020, págs. 1700-1701
In October 1936, as the Spanish Civil War turned a tension in peripheral Europe into a European disaster, the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy signed a series of agreements detailing the need for “a common action … to prevent the creation and consolidation of a Catalan State”. The backdrop to the revolutionary charades, the self-evident dangers of “totalitarian states”, and the conservative enthusiasms of Franco’s “Spanish nationalists” lay in the potential of Catalonia seceding. What would be the internal and international implications? The postwar world of 1919–1923 created political patterns that gave heart to many sub-state nationalisms – patterns that hardened into conflictual shape, especially after the rise of Hitler in early 1933. Contributors to the volume trace the convictions of journalists, observers and diplomats that a Catalan split-off was inevitable. But Catalan politics blew in quite another way, later reacting to Soviet dis-interest and British indecisiveness, amongst a host of other pressures. Placing Catalonia and the Catalan nationalist movement in the foreground of contemporary Spanish discourse reveals why present internal complexities require a historical dimension that takes into account early twentieth-century pan-European/ pan-international movements that supported or decried secession, albeit for widely differing nationalist motives. Not least were the perceived and feared reactions of minority populations, and the potential strategic geographic/diplomatic consequences for European leaders. In a way, the unfolding of antagonisms on the international and European scene led to the internal Spanish conflict. The Illusion of Statehood takes the reader away from the bluster of left/right politics and the potentialities of social revolution toward a better understanding of how Catalan independence was viewed by European states and powers. This thoughtfully argued book is essential reading for all historians and students of twentieth-century European history. It provides a much-needed reasoned perspective on the Catalan issue and its historical antecedents.
How to Become Independent in Europe (and America) Before 1931: Upholding the Monarchy or Proclaiming a Republic?
Nationalities, Nations, States: Models of the National Question in Europe in the 1930s
A Most Uncomfortable Issue: the Independence of Catalonia as an European Geopolitical Concern (1936–1939)
A Catalan Separate Peace During the Civil War?: Catalan Nationalist Fantasy and Spanish Republican Criticism Regarding the Role of Catalonia, 1936–1939
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