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University of Nebraska Press
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| Publication Date: June 1982 |
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| Hardcover |
| ISBN: 080321961X |
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For more than forty years, the Spanish civil war (1936-1939) has dominated the political imagination of men and women throughout the Western world, because, as an apparent confrontation between democracy and fascism, it represented a dress rehearsal for World War II. Outside of Western Europe and the United States, however, the issues that divided Spain were eerily familar to her former territories overseas--the republics of Spanish America. There, the international implications of an ideological struggle were inextricably linked to local issues with deep historic roots--an age-old conflict between church and state, between oligarchs and a rising urban populationm, between the forces of latifundia and the pressures of a land-hungry peasantry, and above all, between civilian and military political classes.
This book is a major study of the Spanish civil war as an issue in the domestic and foreign policies of the Spanish-speaking nations of the Western hemisphere. As such, it refracts much that is already familar to the American reader through a new prism--the world of Spanish-American politics and culture. It also considers the legacy of the war, including large refugee populations and a political tradition of ideological violence that continues to afflict much of Spanish America today.
Mark Falcoff is a resident scholar at AEI.

Table of Contents

Preface
Annotated Chronology
Introduction: The Background to the Civil War in the Spain and the U.S. Response to the War
Mexico, by T. G. Powell
Cuba, by Alistair Hennessy
Colombia, by David Bushnell
Peru, by Thomas M. Davies Jr.
Chile, by Paul W. Drake
Argentina, By Mark Falcoff
Contributors
Index