Description
About the Author
Ruth Sanz Sabido is Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK.
Reviews
With thousands of books published on the Spanish Civil War, Sanz Sabido's twist is to preserve memories of residents of the small Andalusian village of Arroyomolinos de Leon to challenge the war's contemporary legacy. Using memory studies, critical ethnography, and oral history, 22 in-depth interviews capture ordinary people's recollections of local events to confront the official, state-sponsored construction of public memory about the bloody conflict. Emotionally charged accounts of active and passive resistance give a rural perspective on Franco forces' repressive acts of accusations, arrests, internments, and executions. Local customs, traditional moral expectations, and close social networks where accusations and personal grudges mix frame the villagers' memories of day-to-day struggles to survive the wartime atrocities and years of hunger that followed. Sanz Sabido juxtaposes such local memories with Spain's Amnesty Act of 1977, which effectively silenced official discussions about such contentious issues to assist the post-Franco transition to democracy. The book's seven chapters advance hope that the Spanish state will eventually recognize the past and acknowledge its failures of historical memory. * CHOICE *
Ruth Sanz Sabido recovers the stifled voices of the victims of fascism and excavates the buried trauma of past and present generations in a powerful monograph based on first- and second-hand testimonies of survivors in a small village in southern Spain. [The author] nobly illuminates the dark origins of Spanish fascism in a compelling microcosmic study - one that will hopefully turn the historiography further toward the resurrection of politically interred remembrances and ultimately realign history with veracity. * LSE Review of Books *
In this reflective oral history enquiry into the popular memory of the civil war in Spain, Ruth Sanz Sabido offers us pertinent and fascinating insights into the now disappearing world of village Spain, where the war is still being fought over. But as her study reminds us, this war is not so much the one actually waged in the late 1930s, as the one made and embedded discursively afterwards by the victorious and long-lived Franco dictatorship, a regime whose cultural and social power has lasted into the present day. This theoretically literate but still highly accessible account opens up for us the granular texture of local life and language, while also providing the crucial broad explanatory context to the memory wars raging in Spain today. -- Helen Graham, Professor of Spanish History at Royal Holloway, University of London
Ruth Sanz Sabido's book makes a compelling case for treating Spain's collective dementia regarding its Civil War by contrasting the experiences of specific people and places with the myths created by the Franco regime and perpetuated by post-Franco governments. Her message comes none too soon. Time is running out for the generations that remember those experiences. -- Richard Barker, Spanish Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point
In its analysis of oral testimonies, Memories of the Spanish Civil War offers a superb combination of scientific rigour, empathy and sensitivity. By recuperating silenced voices from a community that is marked by the experience of Francoist violence, Ruth Sanz Sabido provides an essential insight into the complexity of individual and collective memory. -- Angela Cenarro, Professor in the Department of Modern and Contemporary History,Universidad de Zaragoza
Book Information
ISBN 9781783483693
Author Ruth Sanz Sabido
Format Paperback
Page Count 210
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield International
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield International
Weight(grams) 322g
Dimensions(mm) 230mm * 151mm * 16mm