- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
-
Chapter 1 Spanish Republicanism and the Press -
Chapter 2 Globetrotters and Rebels -
Chapter 3 Anarchism and the End of Empire -
Chapter 4 Red Florida in the Caribbean Red -
Chapter 5 Spanish-speaking Anarchists in the United States -
Chapter 6 Spanish Firemen and Maritime Syndicalism, 1902–1940 -
Chapter 7 Moving West -
Chapter 8 Caritina M. Piña and Anarcho-syndicalism -
Chapter 9 Traces of the Revista Única -
Chapter 10 The Anarchist Imaginary -
Chapter 11 Reflections of the United States -
Chapter 12 Transnational Anarchist Culture in the Interwar Period -
Chapter 13 Keepsakes of the Revolution -
Chapter 14 España Libre (1939–1977) -
Chapter 15 Federico Arcos (1920–2015) - Epilogue
-
Appendix A Periodicals (Selected) -
Appendix B Archives, Digital Databases, and Projects (selected) - Contributors
- Index
- Index
Introduction
Introduction
Hispanic Anarchist Print Culture: Writing from Below
- Chapter:
- (p.1) Introduction
- Source:
- (p.iii) Writing Revolution
- Author(s):
Christopher J. Castañeda
Montse Feu
- Publisher:
- University of Illinois Press
Hispanic intervention in the colonial history of the Americas is well-known.1 Much less understood is the modern Hispanic migration to, and struggle for freedom in, the United States. To better understand the complexities of this intersectional migration, we focus on the lives of Hispanic anarchists, libertarians, and free thinkers who rejected the hallmarks of traditional society—church, state, and capitalism—because they deemed those institutions to be oppressive and tyrannical. In their endeavor to create a truly equitable society built upon the ideals of liberty and justice for all, these anarchists developed a vibrant network of transnational periodicals from the late 19th through 20th centuries....
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
-
Chapter 1 Spanish Republicanism and the Press -
Chapter 2 Globetrotters and Rebels -
Chapter 3 Anarchism and the End of Empire -
Chapter 4 Red Florida in the Caribbean Red -
Chapter 5 Spanish-speaking Anarchists in the United States -
Chapter 6 Spanish Firemen and Maritime Syndicalism, 1902–1940 -
Chapter 7 Moving West -
Chapter 8 Caritina M. Piña and Anarcho-syndicalism -
Chapter 9 Traces of the Revista Única -
Chapter 10 The Anarchist Imaginary -
Chapter 11 Reflections of the United States -
Chapter 12 Transnational Anarchist Culture in the Interwar Period -
Chapter 13 Keepsakes of the Revolution -
Chapter 14 España Libre (1939–1977) -
Chapter 15 Federico Arcos (1920–2015) - Epilogue
-
Appendix A Periodicals (Selected) -
Appendix B Archives, Digital Databases, and Projects (selected) - Contributors
- Index
- Index