In this Book

The Rise of Euroskepticism: Europe and Its Critics in Spanish Culture

Book
Luis Martin-Estudillo
2018
summary
Electronic open-access edition funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Covering from 1915 to the present, this book deals with the role that artists and intellectuals have played regarding projects of European integration. Consciously or not, they partake of a tradition of Euroskepticism. Because Euroskepticism is often associated with the discourse of political elites, its literary and artistic expressions have gone largely unnoticed. This book addresses that gap.

Taking Spain as a case study, author Luis Martín-Estudillo analyzes its conflict over its own Europeanness or exceptionalism, as well as the European view of Spain. He ranges from canonical writers like Unamuno, Ortega y Gasset, and Zambrano to new media artists like Valeriano López, Carlos Spottorno, and Santiago Sierra. Martín-Estudillo provides a new context for the current refugee crisis, the North-South divide among EU countries, and the generalized disaffection toward the project of European integration.

The eclipsed critical tradition he discusses contributes to a deeper understanding of the notion of Europe and its institutional embodiments. It gives resonance to the intellectual and cultural history of Europe's "peripheries" and re-evaluates Euroskeptic contributions as one of the few hopes left to imagine ways to renew the promise of a union of the European nations.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xii

Introduction: A Cultural Poetics of Spanish Euroskepticism

pp. 1-24

I. Europe on the Horizon

1. The Location of Dissent: Spanish Exiles and the European Cataclysm

pp. 27-56

2. Sense and Sensuousness: Approaching Europe under Franco's Dictatorship

pp. 57-88

II. Examining the Union from Within

3. Unanimity in Question

pp. 91-126

4. On the Move in a Static Europe

pp. 127-172

5. The Great Recession and the Surge of Euroskepticism: A Pigs' Tale

pp. 173-196

Epilogue: A Plea for Creative Euroskepticism

pp. 197-200

Notes

pp. 201-216

References

pp. 217-232

Index

pp. 233-244
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