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Jaume Russinyol: le problème national catalan
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Nationalism and intellectuals in nations without states : the catalan case
Guibernau i Berdún, M. Montserrat +1 more
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Assault on the Catalan Parliament: Catalan Nationalism versus Spanish Democracy
Democracy and Security, 2021Although not as renowned as the assault on the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, on October 27, 2017 some of the elected representatives of the Catalan Parliament, those who are in favor of Catalonia’s independence from Spain, unilaterally declared Catalonia’s independence against the Spanish Constitution, Spanish laws and the decisions of the ...
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The Sardana: Catalan Dance and Catalan National Identity
The Journal of American Folklore, 1990The sardana, a circle dance from northeast Spain, emerged in the mid-19th century as a key symbol of Catalonia. A prototypical invented tradition, the sardana represents qualities that Catalans hold dear, such as harmony, democracy, brotherhood, and national identity as an achieved rather than ascribed status.
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Catalan and Basque Nationalism
Journal of Contemporary History, 1971The union of the Hispanic crowns in 1478-9 created a joint Spanish state but not a unified nation. Under the Habsburg imperial system of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the historic constitutional pluralism of the five Hispanic kingdoms, together with the legal and administrative rights of the Basque country and the Balearics, were maintained ...
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The Emergence of Catalan Nationalism
2022With the 1880s, a coherent nationalist ideology, Catalanism, emerged in the hands of a conservative Catalan intelligentsia. Rather than formal independence, Catalanism sought Catalonia’s self-government within a federal Spain, as well as the modernization of the Spanish state.
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Mass Schooling and Catalan Nationalism
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 2013In 1659, the kingdoms of France and Spain signed the Treaty of Pyrenees, a peace treaty by which a piece of the Spanish territory became part of France. Since then, Catalan identity has persisted on both sides of the border. However, while this identity is today politically and socially relevant in Spain, it is not in France.
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Catalan high-end restaurants and national ‘heritage’
Catalan Journal of Communication & Cultural Studies, 2013Abstract Though not unique to the Catalan situation, nationalistic claims attached to high-end culinary creations fit within the current political desires of many nations competing for international distinction. The various agents involved in the development of the local gastronomy shape their discourses, with language well beyond the ...
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