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Notability and Revolution: Social Origins of the Political Elite in Liberal Spain, 1800 to 1853

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Jesus Cruz
Affiliation:
University of Delaware

Extract

Don Anselmo, the protagonist of a story by Mesonero Romanos, was a wealthy established gentleman in one of Andalusia's leading towns. Young, good-looking, affable, and generous, Anselmo held all the virtues and qualities that can make a man happy, except for one weakness: an overbearing ambition for becoming important. First, he did everything possible to attain a position of power in his town. Unsatisfied with merely local power, he decided to leave his house and possessions in the hands of an administrator and emigrate to Madrid, the only place in Spain where one could achieve a brilliant political career. Once in Madrid he spent his time and his money looking for protection and political connections, a process in which he experienced only personal humiliation and frustration. In the end, Don Anselmo, once a wealthy provincial gentleman, became a failed politician who abandoned both his family and his estate. Don Anselmo's sorry destiny illustrates, according to Mesonero, one of the worse diseases of Spanish society: the empleomania of its elites, a terrible misjudgment that provoked the abandon of productive activities and contributed to the country's backwardness.

Type
Old Social Ties and New States
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1994

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References

1 Ramón de Mesonero Romanos (1803–1882) wrote the best pages on Madrid social life during the reign of Isabel II. Traditionally he has been considered one of the main representatives of Spanish costumbrismo, a literary genre that emphasized description of customs and popular life. However, Mesonero's writing went beyond the descriptive framework. His Madrid scenes are full of sociological observations and critical judgments of many aspects of Madrid social life. Because he mainly focused his critiques on the middle and upper classes, he has been labeled a bourgeois writer by some literary critics. New approaches to Mesonero's work emphasize him as a forerunner of literary realism and naturalism of the second half of the century.

2 Mesonero coined the term empleomanía to signify the desire of most members of the elite to obtain jobs in the State administration.

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24 The marquis of Caballero, for instance, had more than 750,000 reales in government debt from owed salaries (AHPM, P. 22980, p. 650).

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40 AHN, Estado, Carlos III, Exp. 1325.

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