Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Iberian Modalities: The Logic of an Intercultural Field
- Part I Institutionalizing Iberian Studies: A Change of Paradigm
- Part II Theorizing Iberia
- 5 Iberia Reborn: Portugal through the Lens of Catalan and Galician Nationalism (1850–1950)
- 6 Francisco María Tubino: Between Federalism and Iberianism
- 7 Translation and Conversion as Interconnected “Modes”: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism in Iberian Cultures
- Part III Iberian Dialogs
- Part IV From Sea to Iberian Sea
- Works Cited
- Index
5 - Iberia Reborn: Portugal through the Lens of Catalan and Galician Nationalism (1850–1950)
from Part II - Theorizing Iberia
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Iberian Modalities: The Logic of an Intercultural Field
- Part I Institutionalizing Iberian Studies: A Change of Paradigm
- Part II Theorizing Iberia
- 5 Iberia Reborn: Portugal through the Lens of Catalan and Galician Nationalism (1850–1950)
- 6 Francisco María Tubino: Between Federalism and Iberianism
- 7 Translation and Conversion as Interconnected “Modes”: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism in Iberian Cultures
- Part III Iberian Dialogs
- Part IV From Sea to Iberian Sea
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Cultural history has provided an ample base of knowledge regarding the complex and multifaceted current of political-cultural perspectives and thought known as Iberianism. This label has housed many projects, such as “annexing” or “fusing” Portugal into the Spanish state, an Iberian federation of these two states, or schemes for the creation of an Iberian League of Nations. Iberianism was a complete failure in the political realm, oscillating between aspirations for the creation of a single peninsular state and the pursuit of some other formula to accommodate the Portuguese national identity within a new Iberia or Hispania. Many Spanish adherents saw in Iberianism a magic recipe for bringing Portugal back to its historical common homeland with Spain, in hopes of restoring the shared political community of the period of dynastic union (1580–1640) and reintegrating Portugal within a single Spanish nation. Republicans, and especially federal republicans, felt that Portugal had been “amputated” from Spain with the Portuguese secession of 1640, which they blamed on the despotic rule of the Habsburg dynasty. This also implied that many Spanish republicans considered the Portuguese rebels of 1640 to be the first authentically Spanish liberals, following the path forged by the revolt of the Castilian Comuneros in 1521. This would suggest that the Portuguese had only left the Spanish political and national community to escape monarchic oppression (Rocamora).
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- Iberian ModalitiesA Relational Approach to the Study of Culture in the Iberian Peninsula, pp. 83 - 98Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013