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Anverso y reverso de la nación: el discurso de la antiespañolada durante los primeros años 40
Author(s) -
Zira Box Varela
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
hispania
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.189
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 1988-8368
pISSN - 0018-2141
DOI - 10.3989/hispania.2015.009
Subject(s) - ideology , supporter , nationalism , humanities , romance , hierarchy , philosophy , literature , history , sociology , art , political science , law , politics , genealogy
During the immediate postwar years, different voices from the new francoist regime produced a discourse relatively spontaneous but, at the same time, recognizable enough addressed to denounce what they considered as an unacceptable deformation of the Spanishness. Basically, and in spite of the ideological differences amongst its producers, the critic raised from a common and painful nationalism which pointed at the foreign look —specially, the French romantic look— as creator and supporter of what they called España de pandereta. This look supposed a distortion and mystification of Spain as a picturesque nation that resulted in the españolada. The aim of this article is to explore this discourse —named in the text as the antiespañolada discourse— proposing a hypothesis: these critics did not expect to eliminate the clichés linked to this image, but to restore them giving to them a new signification. Consequently, elements as typical as bullfighting, flamenco or Andalusia were claimed as deeply Spanish elements, but representatives of a Nation that far from being coloured with the stridency of the españolada was a hierarchy, serious and a straight Nation

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