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Building Liberal Identities in 19th Century Madrid: The Role of Middle Class Material Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Jesus Cruz*
Affiliation:
University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
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In recent years, most historians have abandoned the idea that the revolutions that shook the Atlantic world between 1776 and 1848 were the work of a single social class. A number of studies on the social composition of the groups that ignited and propelled the different revolutionary processes demonstrate the diversity of conditions and social backgrounds of the revolutionaries. However, this revisionism is posing new questions as to why these contingencies in Europe and the Americas decided to mobilize, to construct new liberal national states, and how they carried it out.

Spain is a good sample case for this historiographical inquiry. At present, few historians accept the idea that the series of upheavals that brought about a new liberal state during the 19th century resulted from the exclusive pressure of a national bourgeoisie. Recent scholarship has revisited the classic bourgeois revolution paradigm by presenting liberalism as an ideology that captivated the imagination of Spaniards of a variety of social ranks, with special impact among urban middle and popular groups. But if Spanish scholars are providing better explanations regarding who embraced liberal ideas and facilitated their spread, the answers for the “why” and “how” this process occurred are, in my opinion, less convincing.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 2004

References

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36 AHPM. P. 27896, p. 2121f.

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40 Some examples can be found in Pérez Galdós’ Fortunata y Jacinta, La de Bringas, Lo Prohibido, and Palacio Valdes, La Espuma.

41 José Garcia de la Torre was minister of Gracia y Justicia in 1820. AHPM, P. 25446, p. 118.

42 Perrot, , “At Home,” p. 342.Google Scholar

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44 AHPM, P. 3573, p. 5522.

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46 AHPM, P. 22848, f. 588.

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