6533b81ffe1ef96bd12779b0
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Simple Geometry of ‘Linearism’. Metaphors of the Nation in the Radical Falangist Discourse of the Immediate Postwar Period in Spain
Zira Boxsubject
History060101 anthropology060102 archaeologySociology and Political ScienceMetaphormedia_common.quotation_subjectOpposition (politics)Gender studies06 humanities and the artsNationalismAesthetics0601 history and archaeologyPoint of departureSociologymedia_commondescription
Taking as a point of departure the understanding that metaphors, as linguistic expressions, indicate the thought processes of those who formulate them, the present article explores a specific metaphor that formed part of the discourse of radical Falangism: the definition of the Spanish nation as straight, upright, linear or vertical, in opposition to another Spain that had to be combatted, and which was portrayed as twisted. The argument put forward here is that, by analysing the various metaphorical expressions that arose in the wake of the identification of Spain with an image of linearity, it is possible to examine aspects of Falange nationalism that bring into relief the ideal of a sombre, spare, masculine and austere Spain.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-02-20 | Journal of Historical Sociology |