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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Paul Garner , Angel SmithPublisher: University of Wales Press Imprint: University of Wales Press Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9781783169719ISBN 10: 1783169710 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 01 February 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSeries Editors' ForewordList of Tables and FiguresNotes on the ContributorsIntroduction: Hispanism, Nationalism and the 'Hispanic Corridor'Chapter1: The National Road of the Cadiz Cortes: Anticolonialism, Liberalism, Nation and StateChapter 2: A Transatlantic Loyalty in the Age of Independence: Catholicism and Nation Building in Spain and Latin AmericaChapter 3: Republicanism, the Nation State and the Religious Quesiton in Mexico and Spain (1851-1917): A Comparative PerspectiveChapter 4: 'Democracia': Popular Liberalism in Sicily, Mexico, Spain and Colombia, 1848-1894Chapter 5: Nationalisms against the Spanish State, 1808-1923: Cuba, Catalonia and the Basque CountryChapter 6: Conflicted Visions: National and International Images of the Nation in a Time of War: Mexico, 1856-1870Chapter 7: 'Identidad fraternal, de sangre, de idioma y de costumbres': The Crisis in the Hispanic Caribbean (1895-1909) and Defensive Nationalism in MexicoChapter 8: The Commitment to Science: The Influence of Spanish Krause-institutionalist Ideology on Latin America, 1875-1914BibliographyIndexReviews'Nationalism and Transnationalism represents a genuinely welcome and refreshing break from the more traditional nationalist works that have eschewed the study of the flow and movement of people and ideas between Spain and Latin America along the Hispanic 'corridor' during the long nineteenth century. The very real impact these had in what were undoubtedly markedly different regions and contexts bound, notwithstanding, by the historical experience of the Spanish Empire, as this ground-breaking collection of essays shows, merits careful consideration. By forcing us to reflect on Cadiz-inspired as well as popular liberalism, meta-national loyalties, Church-state relations, Krausismo, and notions of Hispanidad vis-a-vis competing Spanish American and Peninsular nationalisms from a global perspective, Garner and Smith's edited volume offers the reader a much needed and exciting new understanding of how the nation-state's emergence and development on both sides of the Atlantic was informed by highly influential transnational ideologies.' - Professor Will Fowler, author of Latin America since 1780 Author InformationPaul Garner is Emeritus Professor at the University of Leeds, and Investigador Asociado, Centro de Estudios Historicos, El Colegio de Mexico.Angel Smith is Reader in Modern Spanish History at the University of Leeds. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |