Subversive Threat or Utopian Revolution? Negotiating Spanish Peasant Uprisings around 1900 through Vicente Blasco Ibáñez's La bodega (1905).

Autor: Hiergeist, Teresa
Předmět:
Zdroj: Substance: A Review of Theory & Literary Criticism; 2024, Vol. 53 Issue 3, p73-87, 15p
Abstrakt: In 19th-century Spain the demands of the working-class movement were not limited to factory workers in the industrialized centers. The peons too laboring under miserable conditions on the large estates in southern Spain began to develop a class consciousness and claim political visibility and better working conditions. In many cases they resorted to drastic measures due to their landlords' adversarial attitude: the armed plunder of crops devastation of fields and death threats against their exploiters. This article analyzes the representation of these peasant uprisings in factual and fictional artifacts of the second half of the 19th century understanding them as indices of a conflicted negotiation of conviviality at the time. Using Vicente Blasco Ibáñez's 1905 novel La bodega as example it considers bourgeois nightmare scenarios of a complot of uncivilized menacing masses as well as anarchist and socialist visions of a classless society created by direct action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index