Workers, Citizens and the Argentine Nation: Party Politics and the Working Class in Rosario, 1912–3
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 October 1999
Abstract
The electoral democracy created by the Sáenz Peña Law of 1912 opened up dramatic new possibilities for working-class political identity. In the important port city of Rosario, the Radical politician Ricardo Caballero crafted a political discourse that combined an explicit defence of working-class interests with a nostalgic depiction of the country's rural past. By linking class consciousness with images drawn from the popular culture of the ‘gauchesque,’ Caballerismo constructed a distinctively working-class version of Argentine nationalism and citizenship.
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- © 1999 Cambridge University Press
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