A Sacred Duty: Nationalist and Anti-Imperial Activisms in Buenos Aires, 1916-1930

被引:2
作者
Hyland, Steven, Jr. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wingate Univ, Dept Hist & Polit Sci, POB 159, Wingate, NC 28174 USA
关键词
global urban history; diaspora studies; Buenos Aires; nationalism; Argentina;
D O I
10.1177/0096144219843114
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
The Southern Atlantic city of Buenos Aires emerged a critical hub of radical political activism between 1916 and 1930 at a time when the influence of anarchist activists waned and organized labor often worked with the Radical Civic Union presidents. Whether based in or passing through this city, activists and exiles, partisans, and pretenders pursued various strategies to achieve revolutionary change, raise funds for causes, assure sovereignty, control the public narrative, and network with like-minded individuals and groups. These agitators created webs of associations throughout the Atlantic world in the process. These networks were vital in fashioning enduring transnational connections, strategies of resistance, shared discourses, and symbolic registers that framed how nationalist and anti-imperial interactions were understood. This article focuses on Irish republicans, Catalan nationalists, and Arab anti-colonialists and their interactions with Argentine agitators, sympathizers, and various state actors to more fully understand the importance of Buenos Aires in this period and the consequences on sociopolitical life in this Atlantic port city up to the global depression of 1930.
引用
收藏
页码:1317 / 1340
页数:24
相关论文
共 114 条
  • [1] Adelman Jeremy., 1999, Republic of Capital: Buenos Aires and the Legal Transformation of the Atlantic World
  • [2] Alcock Antony, 2000, HIST PROTECTION REGI, P39
  • [3] Alonso Paula, 2011, REVOLUTION BALLOT BO
  • [4] Amaral Samuel., 1998, RISE CAPITALISM PAMP
  • [5] AMREC, 1927, COMMUNICATION 0307
  • [6] AMREC, 1927, COMMUNICATION 0505
  • [7] AMREC, 1927, COMMUNICATION 0212
  • [8] AMREC, 1925, COMMUNICATION 1123
  • [9] [Anonymous], 1921, THE SO CROSS 0729
  • [10] [Anonymous], 1928, LA PRENSA