User:Czar/drafts/Historiography of the Spanish Civil War
Appearance
Critical accounts of Franco Nationalists were published outside of Spain, such as the Basque translation of The Tree of Gernika, published in Caracas in 1963 by exiles.[1]
References
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Brendon, Piers (June 24, 2006). "Review: The Battle for Spain by Antony Beevor". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077.
- Brodie, Morris (February 5, 2019). "Salvaging the Revolution – Anarchist Historiography on the Spanish Civil War". Anarchist Studies.
- Cañiz, Assumpta Castillo (September 2016). "Anarchism and the countryside: Old and new stumbling blocks in the study of rural collectivization during the Spanish Civil War". International Journal of Iberian Studies. 29 (3): 225–239. doi:10.1386/ijis.29.3.225_1.
- Casanova, Julián (December 1992). "Anarchism, Revolution and Civil War in Spain: The Challenge of Social History". International Review of Social History. 37 (3): 398–404. doi:10.1017/S0020859000111356. ISSN 0020-8590.
- Durgan, Andy (June 21, 2007). "Introduction". The Spanish Civil War. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-21509-3.
- Esenwein, George R. (2005). "Interpreting Spain's Civil War and Revolution". Spanish Civil War: A Modern Tragedy. Sources in History. New York: Routledge. pp. 1–. ISBN 0-203-08785-2.
- Faber, Sebastiaan (2008). "The Novel of the Spanish Civil War". In Altisent, Martha Eulalia (ed.). A Companion to the Twentieth-century Spanish Novel. Woodbridge: Tamesis. pp. 77–90. ISBN 978-1-85566-174-5.
- Lloyd, John (May 25, 2017). "The truth about the post-truth age". Financial Times. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
Orwell ... believed that 'a true history' of the Spanish civil war, in which Orwell fought, was impossible because both the Franco-ists and the communist-dominated elected government had 'dealt extensively in lies', and thus in any history 'the lie will have become truth'. D'Ancona sees this as 'an early premonition of the Post-Truth era'. ¶But Orwell was wrong. Histories that diligently sift truth from falsehood have been published, in Spain and abroad. In the 2000s alone, three such works by acclaimed British historians have appeared — Antony Beevor's The Battle for Spain, Paul Preston's The Spanish Civil War and the updated edition of Hugh Thomas's The Spanish Civil War. In Spain itself, a lively debate cannot be halted. History, like much else in public life, has become more, not less, truth-seeking.
- Lo Cascio, Paola; Pellegrini, Alberto (April 2013). "A 'State of the Question' of recent military historiography". Soldiers, Bombs and Rifles: Military History of the 20th Century. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 4–10. ISBN 978-1-4438-4749-0.
- Payne, Stanley G. (1988). "Recent Historiography on the Spanish Republic and Civil War". The Journal of Modern History. 60 (3): 540–556. ISSN 0022-2801. JSTOR 1881402.
- Preston, Paul (2007). "Bibliographical Essay". The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution and Revenge. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. pp. 333–357. ISBN 978-0-393-32987-2. OCLC 85830725.
- Thomas, Hugh (2001) [1961]. "Bibliographical Note". The Spanish Civil War (Revised ed.). New York: The Modern Library. pp. 947–963. ISBN 0-375-75515-2.
- http://archive.is/HvNPv