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The book explores the symbolic emergence of the Second Spanish Republic in Madrid s public space in the aftermath of Francisco Franco s dictatorship. Despite the constraints of a transition to democracy premised on restoring the Bourbon monarchy and promoting national reconciliation, Madrid provided exceptional conditions for recovering republican memory. The city s left-wing administration, elected in the first democratic municipal election in 1979, pursued a cautious yet affirmative politics of memory toward Spain s republican past.
Drawing on empirical research, the study focuses on mnemonic materialisation of the Second Spanish Republic through street nomenclature, monuments and plaques established between 1979 and 1992. Most of these memorials endure to this day, having withstood contestation, theft and vandalism. By reconstructing their emergence and tracing their evolving public presence, the book offers a nuanced account of how democratic memory practices took shape amid the tensions and contradictions of Spain s negotiated political transition.
List of contents
1. Introduction.- 2. Monuments and the Memory of Urban Spaces.- 3. Remembering and Forgetting the Second Spanish Republic.- 4. Negotiating the Past during Madrid s First Democratic Governments.- 5. Unearthing the Memory: Recovering Republican Monuments.- 6. Putting Down Democratic Roots: Memorials to Political Agents of the Republic.- 7. Recovering Spain s Cultural Modernity.- 8. Honouring the International Defenders of the Republic.- 9. Conclusion.
About the author
Teresa Pinheiro is Professor of Iberian Studies at the Institute for European Studies, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany. She has extensively published on collective identity and politics of memory in Portugal and Spain. Her recent publications include
Cultura en transició and
Iberian Studies: Reflections across Borders and Disciplines (with Núria Codina).
Summary
The book explores the symbolic emergence of the Second Spanish Republic in Madrid’s public space in the aftermath of Francisco Franco’s dictatorship. Despite the constraints of a transition to democracy premised on restoring the Bourbon monarchy and promoting national reconciliation, Madrid provided exceptional conditions for recovering republican memory. The city’s left-wing administration, elected in the first democratic municipal election in 1979, pursued a cautious yet affirmative politics of memory toward Spain’s republican past.
Drawing on empirical research, the study focuses on mnemonic materialisation of the Second Spanish Republic through street nomenclature, monuments and plaques established between 1979 and 1992. Most of these memorials endure to this today, having withstood contestation, theft and vandalism. By reconstructing their emergence and tracing their evolving public presence, the book offers a nuanced account of how democratic memory practices took shape amid the tensions and contradictions of Spain’s negotiated political transition.