University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 340
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-1-61148-561-5 • Hardback • December 2014 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-1-61148-562-2 • eBook • December 2014 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
Thomas Harrington is associate professor of Hispanic studies at Trinity College.
Contents
Notes on Translations
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Prologue
One: Peoples, Pedagogies and the Reemergence of Iberian Pluralism
Two: Enric Prat de la Riba’s La nacionalitat catalana: Merging Tradition and Modernity to Create a New Basis for the Institutional Reconstruction of Catalonia
Three: A Manual of “Supra-Modern” Nationhood: Pascoaes’s Arte de Ser Português
Four: Building the Nation through Appropriation: Vicente Risco’s Teoría do Nacionalismo Galego
Five: The Castilian Counter-offensive: Ortega’s España invertebrada
Six: The Essential Role of Nationalist Catechists in the Elaboration of the Contemporary Iberian Discourses of Identity
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Thomas Harrington's Public Intellectuals and Nation-Building in the Iberian Peninsula 1900-1925: The Alchemy of Identity, is a timely and important addition to current debates on nationhood and national identity in today's Spain and Portugal. Through a detailed historical treatment of the work of four preeminent nationalist "catechisms" of the early twentieth century, Harrington sheds much-needed light upon the architecture of competing discourses of national identity in today's Peninsula. Perhaps the book's greatest strength, however, is the way it allows us to observe the parallel and often surprisingly interconnected genesis of that region's supposedly radically distinct codes of collective belief.
— Josep Maria Solé I Sabaté
Grounded on solid research and convincing theoretical approach, Harrington’s book is an unavoidable contribution to the growing field of Iberian Studies. It truly makes a difference that the author is versant in all the languages and cultures under discussion and attains a truly comparative perspective. Harrington analyzes the historical and ideological background of current debates, thus the tropes of cultural identity first generated between 1874 and 1923, a period when the Iberian Problem of the Nation was far more intricate and complex than presented by most canonical treatments of the matter with a fixation on literary generations based in Madrid. Compelling readings of major texts by Enric Prat de la Riba, Pascoaes, Risco and Ortega y Gasset Nationalism demonstrate that three of the four concepts of nationhood studied are strongly linked to the nineteenth-century Romantic reaction to the modern notion of progress, a fourth one connected to the need of an elite leadership class, inspiring myths, and the desire for transcendence through group identification and for an imperial project. The book provides, among other things, a roadmap and an encyclopedic guide for those willing to understand the puzzle of contemporary Spanish politics, particularly the battle between conflicting visions of national identity within the Iberian Peninsula.
— Enric Bou, Ca' Foscari University of Venice