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Sociological Francoism

Sociological Francoism (Spanish: franquismo sociológico) is an expression used in Spain which attests to the social characteristics typical of Francoism that survived in Spanish society after the death of Francisco Franco in 1975 and continue to the present day.[1]

Plaza de Oriente, with the Royal Palace of Madrid behind. This was the setting for the largest pro-Francoist demonstrations both during the dictator's life and after his death. Francoists who remain nostalgic of the regime still commemorate his death here every 20 November (known in Spanish as 20-N).

The root causes of sociological Francoism are found in the prolonged state of repression that existed during the forty years of the Franco dictatorship (1936–1975), and the fear of a repetition of the Spanish Civil War and a clashing of the so-called two Spains. A further reason for its durability is the positive role attributed to Francoism in the Spanish economic boom (the Spanish miracle, 1959–1975), while avoiding reference to the mass Spanish emigration or the period of economic recession that prevailed during the ten years following the Transition (1975–1985). All of this led the Spanish social majority, including even those identified with the anti-Francoist opposition, to perpetuate the conservative and survivalist behaviours that were learned and transmitted from generation to generation since the 1940s. These include self-censorship and the voluntary submission and conformity to authority[2] – which in extreme cases could even be classified as servility (most commonly identified with the "silent majority") – which provided the regime with its cheapest, most effective and most ubiquitous form of repression.[3]

In an interview with Xavier Moret, the writer Manuel Vázquez Montalbán described the phenomenon in the following way:

There was a sociological Francoism which existed before and still exists to a greater or lesser extent today, coupled with Francoist rhetoric in which only the best years – those of 1962 or 1963 and the first part of the 1970s – are remembered, omitting the years of misery and the economic recession that existed prior to the Spanish Civil War and continued to grow under Francoism. The economically prosperous years have been mythologized within sociological Francoism; however, we should remind ourselves that this success was based on exporting the unemployed first to Catalonia and the Basque Country and then later to Europe.[4]

In a similar vein, the philosopher José Luis López Aranguren has written that "Francoism, while originally a political system, transformed into a way of life for the Spanish people".[5]

Sociological Francoism and political culture edit

In the exercise of political power, sociological Francoism is defined as "the political culture of identification with the [Francoist] regime".[6]

However, the journalist Antonio Maestre adds a definition that goes beyond the political sphere, describing sociological Francoism as:

The collection of citizens and politicians that, having lived well under Francoism and supported its ideas, were in favour of opening up the regime to a certain degree to ensure that the Transition would proceed in a tolerable direction.[7]

The popularity of Franco during his dictatorship was not measured in opinion polls, but in the legitimacy of the army and the charismatic legitimacy of his person (caudillismo), as well as the widespread social binding that took place through the Movimiento nacional (all of which are typical elements of fascism). Together, these ensured massive public demonstrations of support and the practically unanimous results in sporadically held national referendums (such as the Spanish organic law referendum of 1966). In 1969, in one of his last televised Christmas addresses, Franco spoke of Spain's future, saying that all was atado y bien atado[8] (literally "tied and well tied", referring to the institutionalization of his regime), which became a popular saying in Spain. Any clues to his personal health were carefully scrutinized, as were his cryptically expressed intentions, such as the phrase no hay mal que por bien no venga (roughly equivalent to "every cloud has a silver lining"), which he used in reference to the assassination of Luis Carrero Blanco in 1973 by the Basque separatist group ETA,[9] and whose meaning was the subject of endless speculation. In a secret 1971 interview with Vernon Walters, envoy of Richard Nixon, Franco expressed his opinion that upon his death, Spanish society would carry out a political evolution that would not break with his legacy, as the now larger and more well-off Spanish middle class would avoid risking another civil war.[10]

In the regime change that followed Franco's death in 1975, however, those that remained most loyal to Francoism were relegated to far-right movements that failed to gain a single seat in 1977 (and only elected a single MP, Blas Piñar, in the second general elections in 1979 under the coalitionist Unión nacional banner).[11] The political right, represented by a coalition of former Francoist administrators under the banner of the Alianza Popular (referred to as aperturistas, those in favour of social reform), attempted to strike a balance between the need to connect with the social majority while at the same time minimizing associations with the past, though with very little electoral success. During the 1970s and 1980s, the social majority tended to vote for parties from the centre (such as the UCD, led by Adolfo Suárez) or the left (PSOE).

In a book about the Transition, Alfonso Osorio, a member of the 1977 Adolfo Suárez government, describes the reasons behind Alianza Popular's failure to capitalize on sociological Francoism:

What the Alianza Popular intended for, in essence, was to use sociological francoism to their advantage. But as it worked out, what they actually capitalized on was the lingering, and less significant, political Francoism...In the meantime, this sociological Francoism...favoured other democratic options closer to the centre.[12]

Yet the political system continued to show elements inherited from Francoism. The debate between a post-Franco reforma o ruptura (political reform or rupture) ended in a compromise reform established by constitutional consensus, as left-wing parties were conscious that their own weakness prevented a full rupture with the old regime.[13] From 1976 onwards, King Juan Carlos I (designated by Franco as his successor in 1969) and his team of close advisors (essentially Torcuato Fernández-Miranda and Adolfo Suárez) implemented the agreed-upon reform, which left both the inmovilistas (ultraconservatives) and the best-known aperturistas (progressives such as Manuel Fraga and José María de Areilza) sidelined from the process. The degree of democracy thus achieved is questioned by some writers, including Armando López Salinas, who considers it essentially controlled reform, in some sense similar to Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa's characterization of the Italian unification in his novel The Leopard: "The ruling classes need to change something so that everything remains the same".[14]

Con Franco vivíamos mejor edit

A sign of the survival of Francoist sentiment in a large segment of the population was, among other things, the widespread success of far-right sympathiser Fernando Vizcaíno Casas' satirical novels (Al tercer año resucitó, De camisa vieja a chaqueta nueva), which express viewpoints associated with the then-popular saying "Con Franco vivíamos mejor" (literally, "We lived better with Franco"). Even in 2007, in the context of the debates surrounding the Historical Memory Law, there was still resistance among large segments of society and the political establishment to condemn Francoism, as demonstrated by Spanish right-wing politician Jaime Mayor Oreja:

Why should I have to condemn Francoism when there were many families that lived it with naturalness and normality? In my Basque lands there were endless myths. The [Spanish Civil] war was much worse than Francoism. Some say that the persecutions in Basque towns were terrible, but it can't have been the case if all the Civil Guards from Galicia were asking to be sent to the Basque Country. It was a situation of extraordinary tranquility. Let's leave the commentaries on Francoism to the historians.[15]

The traditional values also remained identified with Francoism: country, religion, and family. As such, "Francoism" is used, in some respects, as synonymous with conservatism, patriarchy, traditionalist conservatism, or authoritarianism; all long-standing phenomena that predate Franco. Indeed, some even reverse the cause and effect between Franco and sociologicial Francoism, positing Franco as the effect of a pre-existing sociological Francoism, as described by former El País editor-in-chief Juan Luis Cebrián:

I don't believe that Franco was the cause, but rather the consequence. I don't think that Franco or Francoism were a sort of military group that seized power, but rather the physical manifestation, or result, of a way of understanding Spain. And a large part of that way of understanding Spain has been transmitted from generation to generation among the sectors of the Spanish right-wing which former president Aznar belongs to, and in which I was educated. I went to the same school as Aznar; my family is, sociologically, like Aznar's; I studied where he studied, which is to say, the Salamanca neighbourhood of Madrid. That is the sociological Francoism to which I belonged, and thus know so well.[16]

The Spanish journalist Enrique Gil Calvo adds desarrollismo – the quick and unscrupulous economic growth that brought about the so-called Spanish Miracle – as another area that has remained identified with Francoism, describing Madrid as having changed from the "red breakwater of all the Spains" to an "ostentatious showcase of upstart sociological neo-Francoism".[17]

The writer Manuel Vázquez Montalbán has been attributed with penning the satirical derivative phrase "contra Franco vivíamos mejor" (literally "We lived better against Franco").[18]

Esto con Franco no pasaba edit

Another saying that remains present in Spanish society is "Esto con Franco no pasaba" ("This never used to happen with Franco"). It was initially used as a way of denouncing behaviours, arising soon after the death of Franco, that contradicted the norms of the ultra-Catholic morality (see: the destape (literally "uncovering") period of Spanish cinema that followed the abolition of censorship, or the Movida Madrileña).

Currently it is usually used in a rhetorical way to point out the irony that, despite living in a liberal democracy, some freedoms that were permitted by the Francoist regime, such as smoking in public places or barbecuing in the mountains or the beach, have been taken away. Similarly, it is used to criticize current problems in society that did not exist in the Franco era, like the Spanish property bubble, and the consequent delay in young adults leaving the family home.[19]

Moncloa syndrome edit

 
The Palace of Moncloa has been the official residence of the Prime Minister since Adolfo Suárez moved it from the former, traditional, location at 3 Paseo de la Castellana next to the Plaza de Colón in Madrid. The isolation attributed to the new location, in a palace whose setting in the northeastern part of the capital brings to mind Franco's residence in the Royal Palace of El Pardo, is reflected in the expression "Moncloa syndrome", which is used to describe the haughtiness or detachment from reality that has supposedly affected all successive Prime Ministers.[20]

Debates have continued as to whether, in a democratic sense, the lasting effects of Francoism were greater or lesser than the actual changes. One aspect described as an inheritance from the Francoist past is the notable personalism of Spain's leadership (e.g. Adolfo Suarez, Felipe González, José María Aznar, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, Mariano Rajoy and Pedro Sánchez) coupled with the extraordinary sway that the government holds over the parliament, much greater than in other European democracies. Although the 1978 Constitution cannot be described as a presidential system, the powers held by the Prime Minister are ample. On the other hand, the investiture of the Prime Minister has always occurred without too many issues until the inconclusive 2015 general election, especially compared to other parliamentary democracies (such as Italy); government mandates have been stable (except for the failed coup d'état of 1981, or perhaps precisely because of it) and lengthy (except the government of Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo, due to that same circumstance), and had never resorted to coalition government,[21] until the second Sánchez Government in 2020.[22][23] A final aspect is the fact that the Spanish government has traditionally been a two-party system with smaller, peripheral nationalist/regionalist parties, although the recent rise of Podemos and Ciudadanos has produced a more fragmented parliament.

Criticism of the concept edit

In an essay, the Spanish academic Carlos Ollero expressed the following reservations about the concept of sociological Francoism:

I think that this expression is imprecise and can lend itself to misunderstandings. It is necessary to distinguish between two interrelated, yet different, meanings, with varying degrees of effectiveness. The first, stricter, meaning refers to the complex of socioeconomic structures and concrete interests that are created, maintained and strengthened by the Francoist system. The second, too broad, includes under the umbrella term of "sociological Francoism" what, in general terms, can be understood as the ensemble of sociopolitical attitudes, consistencies in personal and collective behaviour, and passive or indecisive inertia prompted by forty years of steadfast exercise of personal power.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Justel, Manuel (1992). "Edad y Cultura Politica". Reis. 58: 69.
  2. ^ Molares do Val, Manuel (4 June 2005). "Franquismo sociológico". Crónicas Bárbaras.
  3. ^ "Interview with José Ribas". 4 February 2008.
  4. ^ Moret, Xavier. "El franquismo era feísimo; daba la impresión de que a todo el mundo le olían los calcetines".
  5. ^ López Pina, Antonio; Aranguren, Eduardo (1976). La cultura política en la España de Franco. Madrid: Taurus. p. 214. ISBN 9788430630318.
  6. ^ Reig Cruañes, José (1999). La cultura política en la crisis del franquismo (PDF). Alicante: Doctoral Thesis in the Facultad de Filosofía y Letras in the Universidad de Alicante. p. 195.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Maestre, Antonio (6 October 2013). "La mayoría silenciosa, el Partido Popular y el franquismo sociológico | lamarea.com". lamarea.com (in European Spanish). Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  8. ^ Barrios, Froilán (8 February 2017). "¿Todo está atado y bien atado?". El Nacional (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  9. ^ Barrón, Gaspar (20 January 2007). "¿No hay mal que por bien no venga? | Galicia | Galicia". ABC.es. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  10. ^ ABC. . ABC.es (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2 December 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  11. ^ "Blas Piñar: Extremist who remained stubbornly loyal to the memory of". The Independent. 1 February 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  12. ^ Osorio, Alfonso (1980). Trayectoria política de un ministro de la Corona (1a ed.). Barcelona: Planeta. ISBN 8432056642. OCLC 7212228.
  13. ^ del Águila Tejerina, Rafael (1982). (PDF). Revista de Estudios Políticos. 25: 101–128. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-12-23.
  14. ^ López Salinas, Armando (April 2004). "Unidad Cívica por la República". www.unidadcivicaporlarepublica.es. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  15. ^ "¿Por qué voy a tener que condenar yo el franquismo?". La Voz de Galicia (in European Spanish). 14 October 2007. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  16. ^ . 26 February 2008. Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  17. ^ "Crítica | Espejismo del espacio público". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). 18 October 2008. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  18. ^ "¿Contra Franco vivíamos mejor?" (in European Spanish). Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  19. ^ "Esto con Franco no pasaba. larioja.com". www.larioja.com. 16 May 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  20. ^ "Reportaje | "He pasado noches sin dormir"". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). 25 July 2010. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  21. ^ "If I were Zapatero... If I were Rajoy (Reflexiones para un momento postelectoral) | Opinión | La Tercera". ABC.es. 29 January 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  22. ^ Gil Grande, Rocío (12 November 2019). "El primer Gobierno de coalición que marcaría un nuevo hito en la historia de España". RTVE (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  23. ^ Castro, Irene (10 January 2020). "Pedro Sánchez se rodea de perfiles técnicos frente al peso político de Unidas Podemos". eldiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  24. ^ Ollero, Carlos (May–June 1984). "Cambio político, monarquía parlamentaria y consolidación de la democracia". Cuenta y Razón. 17.

sociological, francoism, spanish, franquismo, sociológico, expression, used, spain, which, attests, social, characteristics, typical, francoism, that, survived, spanish, society, after, death, francisco, franco, 1975, continue, present, plaza, oriente, with, r. Sociological Francoism Spanish franquismo sociologico is an expression used in Spain which attests to the social characteristics typical of Francoism that survived in Spanish society after the death of Francisco Franco in 1975 and continue to the present day 1 Plaza de Oriente with the Royal Palace of Madrid behind This was the setting for the largest pro Francoist demonstrations both during the dictator s life and after his death Francoists who remain nostalgic of the regime still commemorate his death here every 20 November known in Spanish as 20 N The root causes of sociological Francoism are found in the prolonged state of repression that existed during the forty years of the Franco dictatorship 1936 1975 and the fear of a repetition of the Spanish Civil War and a clashing of the so called two Spains A further reason for its durability is the positive role attributed to Francoism in the Spanish economic boom the Spanish miracle 1959 1975 while avoiding reference to the mass Spanish emigration or the period of economic recession that prevailed during the ten years following the Transition 1975 1985 All of this led the Spanish social majority including even those identified with the anti Francoist opposition to perpetuate the conservative and survivalist behaviours that were learned and transmitted from generation to generation since the 1940s These include self censorship and the voluntary submission and conformity to authority 2 which in extreme cases could even be classified as servility most commonly identified with the silent majority which provided the regime with its cheapest most effective and most ubiquitous form of repression 3 In an interview with Xavier Moret the writer Manuel Vazquez Montalban described the phenomenon in the following way There was a sociological Francoism which existed before and still exists to a greater or lesser extent today coupled with Francoist rhetoric in which only the best years those of 1962 or 1963 and the first part of the 1970s are remembered omitting the years of misery and the economic recession that existed prior to the Spanish Civil War and continued to grow under Francoism The economically prosperous years have been mythologized within sociological Francoism however we should remind ourselves that this success was based on exporting the unemployed first to Catalonia and the Basque Country and then later to Europe 4 In a similar vein the philosopher Jose Luis Lopez Aranguren has written that Francoism while originally a political system transformed into a way of life for the Spanish people 5 Contents 1 Sociological Francoism and political culture 2 Con Franco viviamos mejor 3 Esto con Franco no pasaba 4 Moncloa syndrome 5 Criticism of the concept 6 See also 7 ReferencesSociological Francoism and political culture editIn the exercise of political power sociological Francoism is defined as the political culture of identification with the Francoist regime 6 However the journalist Antonio Maestre adds a definition that goes beyond the political sphere describing sociological Francoism as The collection of citizens and politicians that having lived well under Francoism and supported its ideas were in favour of opening up the regime to a certain degree to ensure that the Transition would proceed in a tolerable direction 7 The popularity of Franco during his dictatorship was not measured in opinion polls but in the legitimacy of the army and the charismatic legitimacy of his person caudillismo as well as the widespread social binding that took place through the Movimiento nacional all of which are typical elements of fascism Together these ensured massive public demonstrations of support and the practically unanimous results in sporadically held national referendums such as the Spanish organic law referendum of 1966 In 1969 in one of his last televised Christmas addresses Franco spoke of Spain s future saying that all was atado y bien atado 8 literally tied and well tied referring to the institutionalization of his regime which became a popular saying in Spain Any clues to his personal health were carefully scrutinized as were his cryptically expressed intentions such as the phrase no hay mal que por bien no venga roughly equivalent to every cloud has a silver lining which he used in reference to the assassination of Luis Carrero Blanco in 1973 by the Basque separatist group ETA 9 and whose meaning was the subject of endless speculation In a secret 1971 interview with Vernon Walters envoy of Richard Nixon Franco expressed his opinion that upon his death Spanish society would carry out a political evolution that would not break with his legacy as the now larger and more well off Spanish middle class would avoid risking another civil war 10 In the regime change that followed Franco s death in 1975 however those that remained most loyal to Francoism were relegated to far right movements that failed to gain a single seat in 1977 and only elected a single MP Blas Pinar in the second general elections in 1979 under the coalitionist Union nacional banner 11 The political right represented by a coalition of former Francoist administrators under the banner of the Alianza Popular referred to as aperturistas those in favour of social reform attempted to strike a balance between the need to connect with the social majority while at the same time minimizing associations with the past though with very little electoral success During the 1970s and 1980s the social majority tended to vote for parties from the centre such as the UCD led by Adolfo Suarez or the left PSOE In a book about the Transition Alfonso Osorio a member of the 1977 Adolfo Suarez government describes the reasons behind Alianza Popular s failure to capitalize on sociological Francoism What the Alianza Popular intended for in essence was to use sociological francoism to their advantage But as it worked out what they actually capitalized on was the lingering and less significant political Francoism In the meantime this sociological Francoism favoured other democratic options closer to the centre 12 Yet the political system continued to show elements inherited from Francoism The debate between a post Franco reforma o ruptura political reform or rupture ended in a compromise reform established by constitutional consensus as left wing parties were conscious that their own weakness prevented a full rupture with the old regime 13 From 1976 onwards King Juan Carlos I designated by Franco as his successor in 1969 and his team of close advisors essentially Torcuato Fernandez Miranda and Adolfo Suarez implemented the agreed upon reform which left both the inmovilistas ultraconservatives and the best known aperturistas progressives such as Manuel Fraga and Jose Maria de Areilza sidelined from the process The degree of democracy thus achieved is questioned by some writers including Armando Lopez Salinas who considers it essentially controlled reform in some sense similar to Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa s characterization of the Italian unification in his novel The Leopard The ruling classes need to change something so that everything remains the same 14 Con Franco viviamos mejor editA sign of the survival of Francoist sentiment in a large segment of the population was among other things the widespread success of far right sympathiser Fernando Vizcaino Casas satirical novels Al tercer ano resucito De camisa vieja a chaqueta nueva which express viewpoints associated with the then popular saying Con Franco viviamos mejor literally We lived better with Franco Even in 2007 in the context of the debates surrounding the Historical Memory Law there was still resistance among large segments of society and the political establishment to condemn Francoism as demonstrated by Spanish right wing politician Jaime Mayor Oreja Why should I have to condemn Francoism when there were many families that lived it with naturalness and normality In my Basque lands there were endless myths The Spanish Civil war was much worse than Francoism Some say that the persecutions in Basque towns were terrible but it can t have been the case if all the Civil Guards from Galicia were asking to be sent to the Basque Country It was a situation of extraordinary tranquility Let s leave the commentaries on Francoism to the historians 15 The traditional values also remained identified with Francoism country religion and family As such Francoism is used in some respects as synonymous with conservatism patriarchy traditionalist conservatism or authoritarianism all long standing phenomena that predate Franco Indeed some even reverse the cause and effect between Franco and sociologicial Francoism positing Franco as the effect of a pre existing sociological Francoism as described by former El Pais editor in chief Juan Luis Cebrian I don t believe that Franco was the cause but rather the consequence I don t think that Franco or Francoism were a sort of military group that seized power but rather the physical manifestation or result of a way of understanding Spain And a large part of that way of understanding Spain has been transmitted from generation to generation among the sectors of the Spanish right wing which former president Aznar belongs to and in which I was educated I went to the same school as Aznar my family is sociologically like Aznar s I studied where he studied which is to say the Salamanca neighbourhood of Madrid That is the sociological Francoism to which I belonged and thus know so well 16 The Spanish journalist Enrique Gil Calvo adds desarrollismo the quick and unscrupulous economic growth that brought about the so called Spanish Miracle as another area that has remained identified with Francoism describing Madrid as having changed from the red breakwater of all the Spains to an ostentatious showcase of upstart sociological neo Francoism 17 The writer Manuel Vazquez Montalban has been attributed with penning the satirical derivative phrase contra Franco viviamos mejor literally We lived better against Franco 18 Esto con Franco no pasaba editAnother saying that remains present in Spanish society is Esto con Franco no pasaba This never used to happen with Franco It was initially used as a way of denouncing behaviours arising soon after the death of Franco that contradicted the norms of the ultra Catholic morality see the destape literally uncovering period of Spanish cinema that followed the abolition of censorship or the Movida Madrilena Currently it is usually used in a rhetorical way to point out the irony that despite living in a liberal democracy some freedoms that were permitted by the Francoist regime such as smoking in public places or barbecuing in the mountains or the beach have been taken away Similarly it is used to criticize current problems in society that did not exist in the Franco era like the Spanish property bubble and the consequent delay in young adults leaving the family home 19 Moncloa syndrome edit nbsp The Palace of Moncloa has been the official residence of the Prime Minister since Adolfo Suarez moved it from the former traditional location at 3 Paseo de la Castellana next to the Plaza de Colon in Madrid The isolation attributed to the new location in a palace whose setting in the northeastern part of the capital brings to mind Franco s residence in the Royal Palace of El Pardo is reflected in the expression Moncloa syndrome which is used to describe the haughtiness or detachment from reality that has supposedly affected all successive Prime Ministers 20 Debates have continued as to whether in a democratic sense the lasting effects of Francoism were greater or lesser than the actual changes One aspect described as an inheritance from the Francoist past is the notable personalism of Spain s leadership e g Adolfo Suarez Felipe Gonzalez Jose Maria Aznar Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero Mariano Rajoy and Pedro Sanchez coupled with the extraordinary sway that the government holds over the parliament much greater than in other European democracies Although the 1978 Constitution cannot be described as a presidential system the powers held by the Prime Minister are ample On the other hand the investiture of the Prime Minister has always occurred without too many issues until the inconclusive 2015 general election especially compared to other parliamentary democracies such as Italy government mandates have been stable except for the failed coup d etat of 1981 or perhaps precisely because of it and lengthy except the government of Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo due to that same circumstance and had never resorted to coalition government 21 until the second Sanchez Government in 2020 22 23 A final aspect is the fact that the Spanish government has traditionally been a two party system with smaller peripheral nationalist regionalist parties although the recent rise of Podemos and Ciudadanos has produced a more fragmented parliament Criticism of the concept editIn an essay the Spanish academic Carlos Ollero expressed the following reservations about the concept of sociological Francoism I think that this expression is imprecise and can lend itself to misunderstandings It is necessary to distinguish between two interrelated yet different meanings with varying degrees of effectiveness The first stricter meaning refers to the complex of socioeconomic structures and concrete interests that are created maintained and strengthened by the Francoist system The second too broad includes under the umbrella term of sociological Francoism what in general terms can be understood as the ensemble of sociopolitical attitudes consistencies in personal and collective behaviour and passive or indecisive inertia prompted by forty years of steadfast exercise of personal power 24 See also editPact of Forgetting Communist nostalgia Southern nostalgiaReferences edit Justel Manuel 1992 Edad y Cultura Politica Reis 58 69 Molares do Val Manuel 4 June 2005 Franquismo sociologico Cronicas Barbaras Interview with Jose Ribas 4 February 2008 Moret Xavier El franquismo era feisimo daba la impresion de que a todo el mundo le olian los calcetines Lopez Pina Antonio Aranguren Eduardo 1976 La cultura politica en la Espana de Franco Madrid Taurus p 214 ISBN 9788430630318 Reig Cruanes Jose 1999 La cultura politica en la crisis del franquismo PDF Alicante Doctoral Thesis in the Facultad de Filosofia y Letras in the Universidad de Alicante p 195 permanent dead link Maestre Antonio 6 October 2013 La mayoria silenciosa el Partido Popular y el franquismo sociologico lamarea com lamarea com in European Spanish Retrieved 17 November 2017 Barrios Froilan 8 February 2017 Todo esta atado y bien atado El Nacional in Spanish Retrieved 17 November 2017 Barron Gaspar 20 January 2007 No hay mal que por bien no venga Galicia Galicia ABC es Retrieved 17 November 2017 ABC Francisco Franco y Richard Nixon ABC es in Spanish Archived from the original on 2 December 2017 Retrieved 17 November 2017 Blas Pinar Extremist who remained stubbornly loyal to the memory of The Independent 1 February 2014 Retrieved 17 November 2017 Osorio Alfonso 1980 Trayectoria politica de un ministro de la Corona 1a ed Barcelona Planeta ISBN 8432056642 OCLC 7212228 del Aguila Tejerina Rafael 1982 La transicion a la democracia en Espana Reforma Ruptura y Consenso PDF Revista de Estudios Politicos 25 101 128 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 12 23 Lopez Salinas Armando April 2004 Unidad Civica por la Republica www unidadcivicaporlarepublica es Retrieved 18 November 2017 Por que voy a tener que condenar yo el franquismo La Voz de Galicia in European Spanish 14 October 2007 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Juan Luis Cebrian 26 February 2008 Archived from the original on 26 February 2008 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Critica Espejismo del espacio publico EL PAIS in Spanish 18 October 2008 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Contra Franco viviamos mejor in European Spanish Retrieved 29 November 2017 Esto con Franco no pasaba larioja com www larioja com 16 May 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2017 Reportaje He pasado noches sin dormir EL PAIS in Spanish 25 July 2010 Retrieved 30 November 2017 If I were Zapatero If I were Rajoy Reflexiones para un momento postelectoral Opinion La Tercera ABC es 29 January 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2017 Gil Grande Rocio 12 November 2019 El primer Gobierno de coalicion que marcaria un nuevo hito en la historia de Espana RTVE in Spanish Retrieved 4 January 2020 Castro Irene 10 January 2020 Pedro Sanchez se rodea de perfiles tecnicos frente al peso politico de Unidas Podemos eldiario es in Spanish Retrieved 11 January 2020 Ollero Carlos May June 1984 Cambio politico monarquia parlamentaria y consolidacion de la democracia Cuenta y Razon 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sociological Francoism amp oldid 1191653077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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