Тёмный

A conversation with Paul Preston : A People Betrayed 

TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
Просмотров 6 тыс.
50% 1

A People Betrayed Blurb:
From the foremost historian of modern Spain comes the bloody, much misunderstood story of how, from 1874 to the present day the Spanish people were devastatingly betrayed by their political class, military and Church.
This comprehensive history chronicles the fomenting of violent social division by institutionalised corruption and startling political incompetence. Most spectacularly during the Primo de Rivera and Franco dictatorships, grotesquely shameless corruption went hand-in-hand with inept policies that prolonged Spain’s economic backwardness well into the 1950s. Prior to 1923, electoral corruption excluded the masses from organized politics and gave them a choice between apathetic acceptance and violent revolution. Bitter social conflict, economic backwardness and conflict between centralist nationalism and regional independence movements exploded into the civil war of 1936-1939.
It took the horrors of that war and the dictatorship that followed to break the pattern. The moderation shared by the progressive right and a chastened left underlay a bloodless transition to democracy. Yet, as before, corruption and political incompetence continued to have a corrosive effect on political coexistence and social cohesion. Sparkling with vivid portraits of politicians and army officers, some corrupt and others clean, recounting the triumphs and disasters of Kings Alfonso XIII and Juan Carlos, A People Betrayed unravels the mystery of why both right and left have been unable or unwilling to deal with corruption and the pernicious clash between Spanish centralist nationalism and regional desires for independence.
Speakers:
Sir Paul Preston CBE, FBA is Príncipe de Asturias Professor of Contemporary Spanish History at the LSE. He was born in Liverpool in 1946 and has dedicated the bulk of his professional life to writing the history of twentieth century Spain in both its domestic and international dimensions. He has lectured widely in Europe and America. Among his books are The Coming of the Spanish Civil War (1978); The Triumph of Democracy in Spain, (1986); Franco: A Biography (1993); Doves of War. Four Women of Spain (2002); Juan Carlos. A People’s King (2004); The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, Revolution, Revenge (2006); We Saw Spain Die. Foreign Correspondents in the Spanish Civil War (2008); The Spanish Holocaust. Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain (2012); The Last Stalinist (2014) The Last Days of the Spanish Republic (2016) and A People Betrayed (2020). He holds the Marcel Proust Chair of the Academia Europea de Yuste (2006) and is a Corresponding Member of the Institut d’Estudis Catalans (2009). His work has been awarded several distinctions and prizes in Spain including the Encomienda de la Orden de Mérito Civil (1986), the Premi Internacional Ramon Llull (2005), the Gran Cruz de la Orden de Isabel la Católica (2007), the Premi Pompeu Fabra (2012) and the Gernika Peace Prize (2019).
Professor Helen Graham is Professor of Modern European History at Royal Holloway University of London. She has published widely on the war of 1936-39 in Spain, including in broader European and transnational context; and also on Francoism, including the mass repression/prison universe of the 1940s. She is the author of five books (and a sixth close to completion), three edited volumes and numerous scholarly articles, as well as many popular historical articles. Her books include the 1995 volume (with Jo Labanyi) Spanish Cultural Studies (Oxford University Press) and The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short Introduction (OUP, 2005) which has been translated into Spanish, German, Turkish, Greek and Portuguese/Brazilian Portuguese, and is available as an audio-book in the US. She has previously taught at the University of Southampton and at New York University and she is currently the holder of a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship (2018-21) for a study of Franco’s prisons 1936-1978.

Опубликовано:

 

21 окт 2020

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 20   
@joseluissanchezvega9270
@joseluissanchezvega9270 8 месяцев назад
Graham, Preston... como Casanovas, Viñas, Maestre... son historiadores necesarios en estos tiempos más que nunca. Gracias por difundir su labor. Saludos
@bernardclements7047
@bernardclements7047 10 месяцев назад
I enjoyed watching this video but would have been pleased to hear more concrete examples to drive home some of the general points made. For example, I think the corruption cases surrounding the PP (Bárcenas, Gürtel, etc.) caused popular anger and led to the downfall of the PP with Rajoy's resignation. The Catalan question has moved on, and in the case of the 1-0 unofficial referendum of 2017, the true colours of the Franco's legacy came to the fore. The PP acted with the sort of instransigence characteristic of the dictatorship: refusal to enter into dialogue, violent repression by the police, including hitting old ladies on the head with their batons, repression of Catalan leaders in the 'process' which led to harsh lengthy prison sentences for those held responsible, etc. The images of the violence went around the world, (without too much reaction from EU member states, which had their own fish to fry no doubt). The lack of independence of the judiciary also became apparent, and allowed Spain to host the only political prisoners in the EU since WWII. With the PSOE now in power, things have quietened down, and the prospect of dialogue is a real one. Sorry for long comment.
@NYC222
@NYC222 2 месяца назад
Thank you for this program. There should be generalized hunger in Spain for historical analyses of high quality, such as Preston's. The problem is that there isn't - only a minority wants to know the truth. The pity and the sadness about Spain is that one can still today (2024) speaks very meaningfully of a "betrayed people" - don't get me started. Las fosas de la vergüenza? This is the cause of international shame! I recommend Spaniards to be much more humble, reflect on their own History and try to learn a bit.
@martinbrowne-harrison7295
@martinbrowne-harrison7295 2 года назад
odd... I think I have a comment here some 2 weeks ago, but I do not see it now... well, probably I should realize we are well beyond 1984, so all this is possible
@welshtoro3256
@welshtoro3256 3 года назад
I love Paul Preston. He broadcasts so well and he projects a warm personality. He is. of course, a superb academic and historian of the first rank. "If you like that kind of thing it's the kind of thing you like" - lol. His very obvious love of Spain and its people is without doubt. His books are a fantastic legacy to Spain and to the understanding of modern Spain to the outside world. Have to say that Paul got it wrong about the U.K. We had the election and the people spoke resulting in a massive majority for the Conservatives and the Brexit vote Part 2. Basque and Catalan separatism is just the same as Brexit. That has to accepted. We live in extraordinary times but I do fear for Spain. The appalling leadership continues and there seems to be no likelihood of change regardless of party and/or parties.
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76 3 года назад
Far from it, if I may interject. Brexit has precious little to do with peripheral xenophobic and supremacist nationalism in Spain.
@welshtoro3256
@welshtoro3256 3 года назад
@@DeOmnibusDubitandum76 My point was simply that Paul is happy for a Basque and Catalan referendum to take place but less so for the U.K, particularly as the result was not the one he wished for.
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76 3 года назад
@@welshtoro3256 Many thanks for clarifying your position. I agree. Cheers!
@makaivictor8795
@makaivictor8795 3 года назад
Pro tip : watch movies at kaldrostream. I've been using it for watching all kinds of movies recently.
@cristianobrayden8712
@cristianobrayden8712 3 года назад
@Makai Victor yea, have been using KaldroStream for years myself =)
@fernandolecaros1661
@fernandolecaros1661 3 года назад
Mrs Graham cannot formulate a question without going into all kinds of extraneous comments
@josemanuelfrademartin6380
@josemanuelfrademartin6380 2 года назад
to follow Mrs, Grahan reasoning is really painful and many times incoherent
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76
@DeOmnibusDubitandum76 3 года назад
Helen Graham has an idyllic and one-sided view of the disastrous Spanish Second Republic.
@Albert-Arthur-Wison225
@Albert-Arthur-Wison225 11 месяцев назад
And the presumable opposing views are, therefore, axiomatically truthful and prosaic ? How ? Why ?
Далее
Khabib came to check on Poirier 👀 #UFC302
00:25
Просмотров 586 тыс.
La Segunda República
39:23
Просмотров 42 тыс.
The Spanish Language and What Makes it The Coolest
8:24
How I Remember Everything I Read
15:53
Просмотров 3 млн
3 Common Pronunciation Mistakes (RP British English)
9:30
Mindscape Ask Me Anything, Sean Carroll | July 2021
3:49:01
Basque Origins | DNA, Language, and History
30:46
Просмотров 1,9 млн