
Spain
Inventing the Nation
Carsten Humlebaek(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Publisher)
Published on 18. December 2014
Book
Hardback
272 pages
978-1-4411-3355-7 (ISBN)
Description
Part of the successful 'Inventing the Nation' history series, this book provides an authoritative and compelling history of Spain in the modern period. Humlebaek places a strong emphasis on the construction of the Spanish national identity and looks at how this identity has emerged and survived amidst the tensions created by the competing, distinct regional identities that exist within the country. Language and language policy, decisive factors in the development of these tensions, are thoroughly examined as Carsten Humlebaek explores the history of Spain along with the very nature of what it is to be Spanish.
Beginning with the Napoleonic invasion and the annexation of Spain in 1808, Humlebaek traces Spain's political history through to the present day. He considers the impact of events like the Spanish Civil War and regimes like that of the Restoration on the Spanish sense of national identity before contemplating the future for Spain as a nation-state.
This book is the ideal volume for all students of history interested in the modern history of Spain.
Beginning with the Napoleonic invasion and the annexation of Spain in 1808, Humlebaek traces Spain's political history through to the present day. He considers the impact of events like the Spanish Civil War and regimes like that of the Restoration on the Spanish sense of national identity before contemplating the future for Spain as a nation-state.
This book is the ideal volume for all students of history interested in the modern history of Spain.
Reviews / Votes
The style of writing is clear, the argument well-structured and the author offers a vivid, concise and dynamic summary of scholarly research on nation building in Spain. * European History Quarterly * The book is well written and accessible to undergraduates, who will find in it a handy synthesis in English dedicated to the national issues in Spain ... done with an unbiased and qualified point of view, which is refreshing and might be useful even to Spanish readers. We already knew that Spain is a weak and divided Nation-state, as far as its national cohesion and collective imagination are concerned, but now we understand better why. * Nations and Nationalism *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
575 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4411-3355-7 (9781441133557)
DOI
CBID169779
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
12/2014
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic USA
€36.49
Available for download
Person
Carsten Humlebaek is Associate Professor of Spanish Cultural and Social Analysis in the Department of International Business Communication at the Copenhagen Business School, Denmark.
Content
1. Prologue \ 2. Planting the Seed of the Nation in an Old State (1808-1833) \ 3. Spanish Liberal Nationalism in Search for a Mass Audience (1834-1875) \ 4. The Non-Solution to the National Problem(s): The Restoration Regime (1875-1923) \ 5. Military Dictatorship as Solution to the Nationalization of the Masses? (1923-1931) \ 6. The 2nd Spanish Republic: The Short-lived Success of the Liberal National Project (1931-1939) \ 7. The Civil War 1936-1939 \ 8. The Franco Regime (1939-1975) \ 9. The Death of Franco as Solution and Postponement \ 10. The New, Democratic and European Spain: United and Divisions Forgotten? \ 11. The Reappearance of the Question of the Past since 2000: Memory Politics in Spain \ 12. Accommodating the Various Nationalist Pretensions in Spain: Is it Possible? \ 13. Epilogue: Crisis in Spain and its Effects on the National Tensions \ Index