1st Edition

Catalan Nationalism Francoism, Transition and Democracy

By Montserrat Guibernau Copyright 2004
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    Are the Catalans content with the outcome of the Spanish transition to democracy? Is there a future for Catalan nationalism within the EU? How does globalization impact upon the survival and development of nations without states such as Catalonia? Will increasing numbers of immigrants transform regional identities? Has devolution fostered secessionism in Catalonia? These are some of the key questions discussed in this book.
    Catalan Nationalism considers whether a nation without a state, such as Catalonia, is able to survive within larger political institutions such as Spain and the European Union. The author examines the different 'images' of Catalonia presented by the main Catalan political parties. The book also provides a study of the role of intellectuals in the construction of nationalism and national identity in nations without states in the global era.
    The key questions addressed in this book are highly relevant for the study of devolution and its consequences, transitions to democracy and globalization and national identity. Based on a successful combination of theory and innovative empirical research, the scope and depth of the book's analysis will make it essential reading for students and academics in the fields of history and politics.

    Introduction  1. Nationalism and Intellectuals in Nationas Without States: The Catalan Case  2. Portrait of a Dictatorship: Francoism  3. The Re-Emergence of Catalan Nationalism During Francoism  4. Catalonia Within the New Democratic Spain  5. Images of Catalonia I: ERC, PSUC-ICV and PSC  6. Images of Catalonia II: CDC and UDC.  Conclusion.

    Biography

    Montserrat Guibernau is a Reader in Politics at the Open University. She has previously taught at the universities of Cambridge, Warwick and Barcelona. Her publications include Nations Without States (1999), nationalisms (1996), Governing European Diversity (2001), Understanding Nationalism (2001) with John Hutchinson, and The Ethnicity Reader (1997) with John Rex.

    'The detailed account of the party positions is very useful for researchers interested in Catalan and Spanish politics.' - Pieter van Houten, University of Cambridge, in Political Studies Review