This book is a biography of Pueblonuevo del Terrible, a mining town located in Andalusia, Spain. Based on previously unexamined sources, the study paints a fresh portrait of industrial workers and their families in Cordoba province, enriching our understanding of this mostly agricultural region.
Previous studies of laboring communities in Spain have identified radical workers, miners among them, as a destabilizing element due to their insurgent protest activity, including lethal violence. This study, by contrast, describes both worker activism and cross-class organizing as constructive, not destructive, and aimed at integration into Spanish society. Economically, the mining zone was dominated by a French company in the Rothschild portfolio. But by running their own city, waging peaceful labor strikes, raising a church, building housing, and honoring their dead, residents turned a quasi-colonial outpost into a pueblo worth defending, and they rallied in defense of the Republic at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. In the making of Pueblonuevo del Terrible, Spanish men and women contended with the perils of mine work, the jolts of industrial capitalism, creeping fascism, and civil war.
As such, this book tells a village-scale story of global events that defined the twentieth century.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'Patricia A. Schechter has written a wonderful story of what we often call modernization. Focusing on a small Andalusian town, Pueblonuevo (Cordoba), she aptly explains how the arrival of "progress" brought with it the emergence of new social groups, identities, and conflicts that deepened until the tragic outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. This is local history at its best' - Antonio Cazorla-Sanchez, Professor of History, Trent University, Canada.
'Patricia A. Schechter has produced an engaging and thought-provoking biography of Pueblonuevo del Terrible, a small mining settlement located north of Cordoba. Her social history serves to explore the pressures of industrial development and worker mobilization in a small Andalusian town from the time of its emergence as a mining camp seeking municipal status to the end of the Civil War. The book figures as one title in Routledge's Microhistories series dedicated to uncovering macrohistorical themes at work in small-scale contexts. As the author explains, "Pueblonuevo is a case study in the global as local"' - Bulletin for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies, Volume 49:1.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Postgraduate
Illustrationen
22 s/w Abbildungen, 16 s/w Photographien bzw. Rasterbilder, 6 s/w Zeichnungen, 1 s/w Tabelle
1 Tables, black and white; 6 Line drawings, black and white; 16 Halftones, black and white; 22 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 161 mm
Dicke: 16 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-032-32275-9 (9781032322759)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Patricia A. Schechter teaches history at Portland State University in Oregon, U.S.A. She is the author of Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880-1930, which won the Keller-Sierra Book Prize. Her other books and public history projects have been recognized for their excellence by ACRL Choice and the Oral History Association, among others.
Prologue: The Myth of Terrible 1. An Embattled Polity 2. Common Ground, Sacred Ground 3. Building Santa Barbara 4. El Dos de Abril 5. The Politics of Wrongdoing 6. Making and Unmaking Place Epilogue: A Theatrics of Death