ABSTRACT

Historians have only recently established the scale of the violence carried out by the supporters of General Franco during and after the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939. An estimated 88,000 unidentified victims of Francoist violence remain to be exhumed from mass graves and given a dignified burial, and for decades, the history of these victims has also been buried. This volume brings together a range of Spanish and British specialists who offer an original and challenging overview of this violence. Contributors not only examine the mass killings and incarcerations, but also carefully consider how the repression carried out in the government zone during the Civil War - long misrepresented in Francoist accounts - seeped into everyday life. A final section explores ways of facing Spain’s recent violent past.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Grappling with Spain's Dark Past

part I|68 pages

Rebel Violence

chapter 1|36 pages

The Psychopathology of an Assassin

General Gonzalo Queipo de Llano

chapter 3|17 pages

Scandal and Diplomacy

The Use of Military Tribunals to Keep the Francoist Repression Afloat During the Civil War

part II|46 pages

Violence in the Republican Zone

chapter 4|21 pages

Political Violence in the Republican Zone

Repression and Popular Justice in a City behind the Lines: Málaga, July 1936–February 1937

chapter 5|23 pages

‘The Civilisation that Is Being Forged Amid the Thunder of the Cannons'

Anticlerical Violence and Social Reconfiguration: July–December 1936

part III|58 pages

Repression and Resistance in the Post-War Period

chapter 6|19 pages

‘Loving the Punished'

The Prison System and the Church in the Post-War Period

chapter 7|17 pages

The Struggle Continues

Everyday Repression and Resistance in Post-War Francoist Spain

chapter 8|20 pages

The Long Nocturnal March

The Spanish Guerrilla Movement in the European Narrative of Antifascist Resistance (1936–1952)

part IV|33 pages

Facing the Past

chapter 9|15 pages

Remembering Spain's War

Violence, Social Change and Collective Identity since 1936