Article contents
Emotions, Moral Batteries and High-Risk Activism: Understanding the Emotional Practices of the Spanish Anarchists under Franco's Dictatorship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 October 2014
Abstract
This article studies the reactivation of activist networks in high-risk settings through a longitudinal analysis of the emotional practices of Spanish anarchists under Franco's dictatorship (1939–75). The anarchists mobilised a series of emotions in their discourse, seeking to change the degree and quality of emotions among potential supporters in order to inspire action. This emotion work focused on hope and indignation, which were crucial tools in the strategic framing of their movement. The use of hope in the anarchists’ discourse allowed them to positively evaluate the effectiveness of their challenge to the authorities. Furthermore, the activists participated in a strategic dramaturgy in front of domestic and international audiences with the intention of reproducing indignation in these onlookers and thus gathering support for their challenge to the regime. The combination of hope and indignation served as a moral battery during two periods of additional intensification of clandestine activity. Other emotions are also analysed, specifically, the resentment provoked by internal struggles in the middle of the 1940s, and the combination of anxiety and fascination towards the visibility achieved by the communists within the anti-Franco opposition in the early 1960s. In the end, longitudinal analysis of the anarchists’ emotional practices seeks to contribute to a better understanding of important questions still little studied in the emerging subfield of emotions and social movements, namely the combination of emotions in collective action and the historical evolution of the emotions.
Les émotions, les motivations morales et l’activisme à haut risque: tentative d’explication des pratiques émotionnelles des anarchistes espagnols sous la dictature franquiste
Cet article se penche sur la réactivation des réseaux d’activistes dans des contextes à haut risque à travers une analyse longitudinale des pratiques émotionnelles des anarchistes espagnols sous la dictature franquiste (1939–75). Dans leur discours, ces anarchistes faisaient appel à une série d’émotions, en cherchant à modifier le degré et la qualité des émotions ressenties par leurs sympathisants potentiels afin de les inciter à l’action. Ce travail émotionnel était centré sur l’espoir et l’indignation, des outils fondamentaux du cadrage stratégique de leur mouvement. Le recours à l’espoir dans le discours des anarchistes leur a permis d’évaluer d’une manière positive l’efficacité du défi qu’ils posaient aux autorités. Ces activistes participaient en outre à une dramaturgie stratégique mise en scène à l’intention d’un public national et international, avec pour objet de susciter chez ce public la même indignation et d’obtenir son soutien pour leur opposition au régime. Cette combinaison d’espoir et d’indignation a servi de motivation morale lors de deux périodes d’intensification accrue des activités clandestines. D’autres émotions sont également analysées, plus précisément le ressentiment provoqué par les luttes intestines du milieu des années 40, et la combinaison d’anxiété et de fascination suscitée par la visibilité acquise par les communistes au sein de l’opposition antifranquiste au début des années 60. En fin de compte, l’analyse longitudinale des pratiques émotionnelles des anarchistes vise à contribuer à une meilleure compréhension de questions cruciales encore peu étudiées dans le sous-domaine émergent des émotions et des mouvements sociaux, en plein essor, à savoir la combinaison d’émotions en jeu dans les actions collectives et l’évolution historique des émotions.
Emotionen, moralischer antrieb und riskanter aktivismus: ein beitrag zum verständnis emotionaler praktiken spanischer anarchisten unter der diktatur francos
Dieser Beitrag untersucht anhand einer Längsschnittanalyse der von spanischen Anarchisten während der Diktatur Francos eingesetzten emotionalen Strategien, wie Aktivistennetzwerke unter hochgradig riskanten Umständen reaktiviert wurden. Anarchisten setzten in ihrem Diskurs gezielt emotionale Strategien ein, um die Intensität und Qualität der Emotionen potenzieller Unterstützer zu beeinflussen und sie zum Handeln zu bewegen. Ihre Bemühungen konzentrierten sich auf die Emotionen Hoffnung und Empörung. Beide waren entscheidende Werkzeuge bei der strategischen Definition ihrer Bewegung. Mit dem Hinweis auf Hoffnung verliehen die Anarchisten der Wirksamkeit der Herausforderung, die sie für die Behörden darstellten, in ihrem Diskurs eine positive Konnotation. Sie setzten zudem vor einheimischem und internationalem Publikum eine strategische Dramaturgie ein, um bei ihren Betrachtern Empörung hervorzurufen und ihre Unterstützung für den Kampf gegen das Regime zu gewinnen. Die bewusste Verbindung von Hoffnung und Empörung diente während zweier durch eine Intensivierung illegaler Aktivitäten geprägter Perioden als moralischer Antrieb. Neben diesen beiden Emotionen analysiert der Beitrag den Unmut, der durch interne Kämpfe Mitte der vierziger Jahre hervorgerufen wurde, und die Mischung aus Angst und Faszination angesichts der starken Präsenz der Kommunisten in der antifrankistischen Opposition in den frühen sechziger Jahren. Diese Längsschnittanalyse der emotionalen Strategien spanischer Anarchisten soll zu einem besseren Verständnis wichtiger, aber von der Forschung bisher vernachlässigter Fragen auf dem noch jungen Teilgebiet der Erforschung von Emotionen und ihres Einflusses auf soziale Bewegungen beitragen. Der Schwerpunkt liegt hier auf der Verbindung von Emotionen im Rahmen kollektiven Handelns und der historischen Entwicklung von Emotionen.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Contemporary European History , Volume 23 , Issue 4: Emotions in Protest Movements in Europe since 1917 , November 2014 , pp. 545 - 564
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014
References
1 Rothbard, Murray N., ‘Are Libertarians “Anarchists”?’, in Gordon, David, ed., Strictly Confidential: The Private Volker Fund Memos of Murray N. Rothbard (Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2010), 29Google Scholar.
2 Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Anarchism’, in Snow, David A., Porta, Donatella Della, Klandermans, Bert and McAdam, Doug, eds, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2013)Google Scholar.
3 del Moral, Juan Díaz, Historia de las agitaciones campesinas andaluzas: Córdoba (antecedentes para una reforma agraria) (Madrid: Revista de Derecho Privado, 1929)Google Scholar; Brenan, Gerald, The Spanish Labyrinth: An Account of the Social and Political Background of the Spanish Civil War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1943)Google Scholar; Hobsbawm, Eric, Primitive Rebels (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1963)Google Scholar.
4 Turcato, Davide, ‘Collective Action, Opacity, and the “Problem of Irrationality”: Anarchism and the First of May, 1890–1892’, Journal for the Study of Radicalism, 5, 1 (2011), 3CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 For an overview of this evolution, see Deborah B. Gould, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’, in Snow et al., eds, Encyclopedia. See also the introduction to this special issue.
6 Ibid. See Goodwin, Jeff, ‘The Libidinal Constitution of a High-risk Social Movement: Affectual Ties and Solidarity in the Huk Rebellion, 1946 to 1954’, American Sociological Review, 62, 1 (1997), 53–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jasper, James M., ‘The Emotions of Protest: Affective and Reactive Emotions in and around Social Movements’, Sociological Forum, 13 (1998), 397–424CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goodwin, Jeff, Jasper, James M. and Polletta, Francesca, eds, Passionate Politics: Emotions and Social Movements (Chicago, Ill.: The University of Chicago Press, 2001)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goodwin, Jeff, Jasper, James M. and Polletta, Francesca, ‘Emotional Dimensions of Social Movements’, in Snow, David A., Soule, Sarah A. and Kriesi, Hanspeter, eds, The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2004), 413–32Google Scholar.
7 Lorenzo, Anselmo, El proletariado militante (Madrid: Alianza, 1974)Google Scholar.
8 During the May Days, anarchists and members of the dissident communist party, the workers' party of Marxist unification (Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista, POUM) fought on the streets of Barcelona against Catalan communists and the Republican police.
9 See Casanova, Julián, Anarchism, the Republic and Civil War in Spain: 1931–1939 (London: Routledge, 2005)Google Scholar; Ealham, Chris, Class, Culture and Conflict in Barcelona, 1898–1937 (London: Routledge, 2005)Google Scholar;Mintz, Frank, Anarchism and Workers’ Self-management in Revolutionary Spain (Oakland, Calif.: AK Press, 2013)Google Scholar.
10 See, e.g., Michel, Henri, ed., European Resistance Movements, 1939–1945 (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1960)Google Scholar; Linz, Juan José, ‘Opposition in and under an Authoritarian Regime: The Case of Spain’, in Dahl, Robert A., ed., Regimes and Oppositions (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1973), 171–259Google Scholar; Hawes, Stephen and White, Ralph, eds, Resistance in Europe, 1939–1945 (London: A. Lane, 1975)Google Scholar; Woodcock, George, ‘Anarchism: A Historical Introduction’, in Woodcock, George, ed., The Anarchist Reader (Hassocks, W. Sussex: The Harvester Press Limited, 1977), 11–56Google Scholar; Miller, David, Anarchism (London: Dent, 1984)Google Scholar; Molinero, Carme and Ysás, Pere, Productores disciplinados y minorías subversivas (Madrid: Siglo XXI, 1998)Google Scholar; Casanova, Julián, ‘Propaganda por el hecho, sindicalismo y revolución: La presencia del anarquismo en la España del siglo XX’, in Moya, Antonio Morales, ed., Ideologías y movimientos políticos (Madrid: Sociedad Estatal España Nuevo Milenio, 2001), 143–62Google Scholar.
11 Carme Molinero and Pere Ysás, Productores disciplinados, 153.
12 For an overview, see Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Memoria e historia de la clandestinidad libertaria bajo el franquismo’, in Rújula, Pedro and Peiró, Ignacio, eds, La Historia en el presente (Teruel: Instituto de Estudios Turolenses, 2007), 339–62Google Scholar.
13 See Tarrow, Sidney, Power in Movement: Social Movements, Collective Action and Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994)Google Scholar; McAdam, Doug, ‘Conceptual Origins, Current Problems, Future Directions’, in McAdam, Doug, McCarthy, John D. and Zald, Mayer N., eds, Comparative Perspectives on Social Movements (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 23–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
14 See Preston, Paul, The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain (London: Harper Press, 2012)Google Scholar; Anderson, Peter, The Francoist Military Trials: Terror and Complicity, 1939–1945 (New York: Routledge, 2010)Google Scholar; Ruiz, Julius, Franco's Justice: Repression in Madrid after the Spanish Civil War (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Casanova, Julián, Morir, matar, sobrevivir: La violencia en la dictadura de Franco (Barcelona: Crítica, 2002)Google Scholar.
15 See William A. Gamson and David S. Meyer, ‘Framing Political Opportunity’, in McAdam et al., eds, Comparative Perspectives, 275–90; Goodwin, Jeff and Jasper, James M., ‘Caught in a Winding, Snarling Vine: The Structural Bias of Political Process Theory’, Sociological Forum, 14, 1 (1999), 27–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goldstone, Jack A. and Tilly, Charles, ‘Threat (and Opportunity): Popular Action and State Response in the Dynamics of Contentious Action’, in Aminzade, Ronald R., Goldstone, Jack A., McAdam, Doug, Perry, Elizabeth J., Sewell, William H. Jr, Tarrow, Sidney and Tilly, Charles, eds, Silence and Voice in the Study of Contentious Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 179–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jasper, James M. and Young, Michael P., ‘The Rhetoric of Sociological Facts’, Sociological Forum, 22, 3 (2007), 270–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
16 For example, Kurzman, Charles, ‘Structural Opportunities and Perceived Opportunities in Social-Movement Theory: Evidence from the Iranian Revolution of 1979’, American Sociological Review, 61, 1 (1996), 153–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goodwin, ‘Libidinal Constitution’; Loveman, Mara, ‘High-Risk Collective Action: Defending Human Rights in Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina’, The American Journal of Sociology, 104, 2 (1998), 477–525CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goldstone and Tilly, ‘Threat (and Opportunity)’; Einwohner, Rachel L., ‘Opportunity, Honor, and Action in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943’, American Journal of Sociology, 109, 3 (2003), 650–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
17 See, e.g., López, Ángel Herrerín, La CNT durante el Franquismo: Clandestinidad y Exilio (1939–1975) (Madrid: Siglo XXI, 2004)Google Scholar; Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Ideología libertaria y movilización clandestina: El anarquismo español durante el franquismo (1939–1975)’, PhD thesis, European University Institute, 2007Google Scholar; Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Factionalism in Transition: A Comparison of Ruptures in the Spanish Anarchist Movement’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 24, 3 (2011), 355–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
18 The MLE in its original form was the liaison committee created in the joint national meeting (Pleno Nacional Conjunto) held by the CNT, FAI and the Iberian federation of libertarian youth (Federación Ibérica de Juventudes Libertarias, FIJL) in Barcelona in October 1938. International Institute of Social History (henceforth, IISH), José Martínez, 1549.
19 Herrerín López, CNT; Romanos, ‘Ideología libertaria’. There were also acts of violence but only few of them and they did not have the support of the movement's most important committees. In fact they were supported and co-ordinated by the movement in exile. See Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Radicalization from Outside: The Role of the Anarchist Diaspora in Coordinating Armed Actions in Franco's Spain’, in Bosi, Lorenzo, Demetriou, Chares and Malthaner, Stefan, eds, Dynamics of Political Violence (Farnham: Ashgate, 2014), 237–54.Google Scholar
20 An account of repression, in Herrerín López, CNT, 145–60.
21 Herrerín López, CNT, 145–60; Romanos, ‘Ideología libertaria’; Romanos, Eduardo, ‘Emociones, identidad y represión: El activismo anarquista durante el franquismo’, Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 134 (2011), 87–106Google Scholar.
22 Testimony, Anonymous, Granada 3 April 1986, in Fundación Salvador Seguí (FSS), Testimonios, 32: Aragón.
23 Solidaridad Obrera, 5 May 1945; CNT, 12 July 1945, and 14 and 15 Aug. 1945.
24 Temblador, Manuel, Recuerdos de un libertario andaluz (Barcelona: Edicion del autor, 1980), 146Google Scholar. See also Gavaldá, Alfons Martorell, Memorias de un libertario: De la República al exilio (Madrid: FAL, 2003), 231Google Scholar.
25 See Prades, Eduardo Pons, Los senderos de la libertad (Europa 1940–1944) (Barcelona: Flor del Viento, 2002)Google Scholar; Prades, Eduardo Pons, Republicanos españoles en la Segunda Guerra Mundial (Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros, 2003)Google Scholar.
26 ‘CNT a los guerrilleros, a los combatientes de retaguardia’, Spain, September 1945, in IISH, Diego Abad de Santillán, 369/1945. The Falange was the fascist inspired party created by José Antonio Primo de Rivera in 1933. During the Francoist dictatorship it was the only political party allowed to operate in Spain. Internal political changes were also a source of hope, ‘We believe that with the triumph of the Labour Party [in the British elections] Franco's days in the Palacio del Pardo are numbered’ (CNT, 14 Aug. 1945).
27 Olegario Pachón Núñez, Recuerdos y consideraciones de los tiempos heroicos (n.p.: Edición del autor, 1979), 31.
28 Goodwin, Jasper and Polletta, ‘Emotional Dimensions’.
29 McAdam, Doug, Political Process and the Development of Black Insurgency, 1930–1970 (Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press, 1982)Google Scholar.
30 Jasper, James M., The Art of Moral Protest (Chicago, Calif.: University of Chicago Press, 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Polletta, Francesca, ‘The Structural Context of Novel Rights Claims: Rights Innovation in the Southern Civil Rights Movement, 1961–1966’, Law and Society Review, 34 (2000), 367–406CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ronald R. Aminzade and Doug McAdam, ‘Emotions and Contentious Politics’, in Aminzade et al., eds, Silence and Voice, 14–50; Elisabeth Jean Wood, ‘The Emotional Benefits of Insurgency in El Salvador’, in Goodwin, Jasper, and Polletta, eds, Passionate Politics, 267–81.
31 Scheer, Monique, ‘Are Emotions a Kind of Practice (and Is That What Makes Them Have a History)? A Bourdieuian Approach to Understanding Emotion’, History and Theory, 51 (2012), 209CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
32 ‘Ante la posible proximidad de nuestro retorno a las libertades públicas: Posición de la CNT en lo político-social y económico’, in IISH, Fernando Gómez Peláez (FGP), 765; La Voz Confederal, Euzkadi, 3 Aug. 1946.
33 ANFD, Ponencia ante la, Comité Nacional CNT, 22 June 1946, in Enrique Marco Nadal, Todos contra Franco: La ANFD 1944–1947 (Madrid: Queimada, 1982), 95Google Scholar.
34 Report, Subcomité Nacional de la CNT en Francia, Toulouse, 3 Jan. 1947, in FSS, CNT-MLE Exilio, 17.
35 Fragua Social, 18 Nov. 1946. The UN General Assembly finally passed a resolution which recommended that ‘the Franco Government of Spain be debarred from membership in international agencies’ and ‘that all Members of the United Nations immediately recall from Madrid their Ambassadors and Ministers plenipotentiary accredited there.’ (Resolution 39(I), December 1946).
36 Romanos, ‘Radicalization from Outside’.
37 Pleno Nacional de Secretarios, 30 Nov. and 1–2 Dec. 1946, Spain, 25 Dec. 1946, in IISH, CNT-Interior, 4.
38 Jasper, James M., Getting Your Way (Chicago, Calif.: University of Chicago Press, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
39 Jasper, James M., ‘Emotions and Social Movements: Twenty Years of Theory and Research’, Annual Review of Sociology, 37 (2011), 285–303CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
40 Reed, Jean Pierre, ‘Emotions in Context: Revolutionary Accelerators, Hope, Moral Outrage, and Other Emotions in the Making of Nicaragua's Revolution’, Theory and Society, 33, 6 (2004), 653–703CrossRefGoogle Scholar, here 667; Cadena-Roa, Jorge, ‘Strategic Framing, Emotions, and Superbarrio – Mexico City's Masked Crusader’, in Johnston, Hank and Noakes, John A., eds, Frames of Protest (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2005), 69–87, here 81Google Scholar.
41 Scheer, ‘Are Emotions a Kind of Practice?’, 210.
42 Robert D. Benford, ‘Dramaturgy and Social Movements’, in Snow et al., eds, Encyclopedia; Benford, Robert D. and Hunt, S. A., ‘Dramaturgy and Social Movements: The Social Construction and Communication of Power’ Sociological Inquiry, 62 (1992), 36–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
43 References come from Solidaridad Obrera, Cataluña, 5, May 1945 and 6, 19 July 1945; Fragua Social, Levante, 19 Dec. 1946; Juventud Libre, 159, 30 March 1947.
44 The idea of strategic dramaturgy, in McAdam, ‘Conceptual Origins’.
45 Solidaridad Obrera, Cataluña, 14 Nov. 1945.
46 Solidaridad Obrera, Cataluña, 16 April 1946.
47 Fraternidad, Órgano del Comité Nacional de enlace UGT-CNT, 1 Sept. 1946.
48 CNT, Spain, 27, 15 June 1947.
49 Jasper, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’, 291. See also Flam, Helena, ‘Emotions’ Map: A Research Agenda’, in Flam, Helena and King, Debra, eds, Emotions and Social Movements (London: Routledge, 2005), 19–40, here 33Google Scholar.
50 Jasper, Art.
51 Jasper, James M., ‘¿De la estructura a la acción? La teoría de los movimientos sociales después de los grandes paradigmas’, Sociológica, 75 (2012), 7–48Google Scholar.
52 Jasper, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’.
53 Ibid.
54 Flam, ‘Emotions’ Map’, quoted in Jasper, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’.
55 King, Debra, ‘Sustaining Activism Through Emotional Reflexivity’, in Flam, Helena and King, Debra, eds, Emotions and Social Movements (New York: Routledge, 2005), 150–69Google Scholar.
56 Romanos, ‘Factionalism in Transition’.
57 Jasper, ‘The Emotions of Protest’.
58 Gould, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’.
59 Report submitted by José E. Leiva to the CNT and FIJL National Committees, Paris, 6 Feb. 1946, in IISH, Ramón Álvarez Palomo (RAP).
60 Proceedings, Plenaria Nacional de Regionales, Spain, 3–5 July 1949, in FSS, Historia Oral; ‘Informe del delegado de la Comisión de Relaciones Anarquistas de Francia asistente a los Plenos Regionales de la FAI y de la FIJL del Interior celebrados los días 15 al 17 de julio en X. [Madrid] (E[spaña])’, Toulouse, July 1947, in FSS, HO; Informe del Comité Peninsular provisional de FIJL, [Madrid], 6 March 1947, in IISH, RAP; Asturias, 11 Nov. 1945; Circular del Comité Nacional del interior, España, August 1946, in IISH, CNT-Interior, 7; Informe de presos al Comité Nacional de MLE-CNT en Francia, España, n.p., in IISH, José Ester Borras, 130; Report submitted by Andreu and Abad to the Sub-Comité Regional de Cataluña in Perpignan, 21 June 1947, in FSS, CNT-Interior, 39; ‘A todos los libertarios españoles’, Paris, 23 March 1948, in FSS, CNT-MLE-Exterior. Previous use of this language in letter, 17 Feb. 1941 (n.p.), Anonymous, but there are references which indicate it was written by members of Consejo General del Movimiento Libertario (IISG, FGP).
61 Herrerín López, CNT, 176
62 Author's interview with Luis Andrés Edo, Barcelona, 29 July and 5 Sept. 2005.
63 Romanos, ‘Ideología libertaria’.
64 Molinero and Ysás, Productores disciplinados, 62–77; García, Rubén Vega, El camino que marcaba Asturias: Las huelgas de 1962 en España y su repercusión internacional (Gijón: Ediciones Trea - Fundación Juan Muñiz Zapico, 2002)Google Scholar.
65 Circular 2, Comité Regional de Cataluña y Baleares de la CNT, August 1962, quoted in Damiano, Cipriano, Resistencia libertaria (Barcelona: Bruguera, 1978), 236–239Google Scholar.
66 Vórtice 2 [1962] (quoted in ibid.: 246) and ‘Una gestión trascendental’, August 1965, in Proyección del Sindicalismo Español, in FSS, Lorenzo Íñigo (LI), 55.
67 Cultura y Acción, May 1962.
68 Letter from Horacio Martínez Prieto to Lorenzo Iñigo, Ivry-sur-Seine, 8 Sept. 1965, in FSS, LI, 55.
69 Moradiellos, La España de Franco, 150.
70 Ysàs, Pere, Disidencia y subversión: La lucha del régimen franquista por su supervivencia, 1960–1975 (Barcelona: Crítica, 2004)Google Scholar; Landrin, Nicolás Sesma, ‘Franquismo, ¿Estado de Derecho?: Notas sobre la renovación del lenguaje político de la dictadura durante los años sesenta’, Pasado y Memoria: Revista de Historia Contemporánea, 5 (2006), 45–58CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
71 ‘La CNT ante la realidad política y social de España’, Spain, June 1962, in IISH, FGP, 736.
72 ‘Ante la problemática sindical española’, Spain, April 1965, in FSS, LI, 55; ‘Mensaje de la CNT de España’, January 1963, in FSS, CNT-Interior, 165. Some even came to ‘spread the idea, because it is true, that the continuing of the hatreds of the Civil War is the malign work of those opposed to the union of all the Spanish people who want to serve the nation.’ (‘Declaración de la CNT ante la realidad política española’, Spain, January 1965, in FSS, LI, 55.)
73 CNT 1932, Memoria del Congreso Extraordinario celebrado en Madrid los días 11 al 16 de Junio de 1931 (Barcelona: Cosmos, 1932), 180–81. ‘Mensaje de la CNT de España’, 1963. See also ASO 1 and 4, January and October 1964
74 The principles of the national movement law (Ley Principios del Movimiento Nacional) of May 17, 1958 stipulated the representation of the natural entities of social life by means of the three pillars of ‘organic democracy’: family, municipality and trade union.
75 ‘La CNT ante el pueblo español’, Comité Nacional de la CNT, Spain, January 1966, in IISH, FGP.
76 ‘Resolución preliminar sobre el sindicalismo obrero español’, 4 Nov. 1965, in Proyección del Sindicalismo Español, in FSS, LI, 55.
77 ‘Declaración de la CNT ante la realidad política española’, Spain, January 1965, in FSS, LI, 55; Proyección del Sindicalismo español, FSS, LI, 55.
78 Moradiellos, La España de Franco; Sampere, Xavier Domènech, ‘El problema de la conflictividad bajo el franquismo: Saliendo del paradigma’, Historia Social, 42 (2002), 123–43Google Scholar; Juliá, Santos, Víctimas de la guerra civil (Madrid: Temas de Hoy, 2004)Google Scholar.
79 Damiano, Resistencia libertaria, 252.
80 e.g. Cultura y Acción, CNT, Vórtice and ASO.
81 ASO 2, May 1964; Letter from Cipriano Damiano to Sveriges Arbetares Centralorganisation (SAC), n.p., [September] 1965, in IISH, FGP, 738.
82 Lorenzo Íñigo, Los cinco puntos (inédito), Madrid, 1985, in FSS, LI.
83 Edo, Luis Andrés, La CNT en la encrucijada: Aventuras de un heterodoxo (Barcelona: Flor del Viento, 2006), 176Google Scholar.
84 Goodwin, Jasper and Polletta, eds, Passionate Politics; Goodwin, Jasper, and Polletta, ‘Emotional Dimensions’.
85 Hochschild, A.R., ‘Emotion Work, Feeling Rules, and Social Structure’, American Journal of Sociology, 85, 3 (1979), 551–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Aminzade and McAdam, ‘Emotions and Contentious Politics’; Dunya M.M. Van Troost, ‘Emotion Work’, in Snow et al., eds, Encyclopedia. Scheer, ‘Are Emotions a Kind of Practice?’.
86 Hochschild, ‘Emotion Work’, quoted in Van Troost, ‘Emotion Work’.
87 Jasper, ‘Emotions and Social Movements’.
88 Important exceptions are Haskell, Thomas L., ‘Capitalism and the Origins of the Humanitarian Sensibility (Parts I and II)’, American Historical Review, 90, 2–3 (1985)Google Scholar, 339–61 and 547–66, respectively; Flam, Helena, ed., States and Anti-Nuclear Movements (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1994)Google Scholar; Gould, Deborah B., Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP's Fight Against AIDS (Chicago, Ill.: The University of Chicago Press, 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
- 8
- Cited by