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Abstract
Introduction: Hispanic anarchist print culture : writing from below --Spanish republicanism and the press: the political socialization of anarchists in the United States (1880s-1910s) / Sergio Sánchez Collantes -- Globetrotters and rebels: correspondents of the Spanish-language anarchist press, 1886-1918 / Alejandro de la Torre -- Anarchism and the end of empire: José Cayetano Campos, labor, and Cuba Libre / Christopher J. Castañeda -- Red Florida in the Caribbean red: Hispanic anarchist transnational networks and radical politics, 1880s-1920s / Kirwin R. Shaffer -- Spanish-speaking anarchists in the United States: the newspaper Cultura Obrera and its transnational networks (1911-1927) / Susana Sueiro Seoane -- Spanish firemen and maritime syndicalism, 1902-1940 / Jon Bekken and Mario Martin Revellado -- Moving west: Jaime Vidal, anarchy, and the Mexican Revolution, 1904-1918 / Christopher J. Castañeda -- Caritina M. Piña and anarcho-syndicalism: labor activism in the greater Mexican borderlands, 1910-1930 / Sonia Hernández -- Traces of the Revista Única: appearances and disappearances of anarchism in Steubenville, 1909-1973 / Jesse Cohn -- The anarchist imaginary: Max Nettlau and Latin America, 1890-1934 / Jorell A. Meléndez-Badillo -- Reflections of the United States: through the pages of La Revista Blanca, 1923-1936 / María José Domínguez and Antonio Herrería Fernández -- Transnational anarchist culture in the interwar period: the magazine Estudios (1928-1937) / Javier Navarro -- Keepsakes of the revolution: transnational networks and the U.S. circulation of anarchist propaganda during the Spanish civil war / Michel Otayek -- España Libre, 1939-1977: anarchist literature and antifascism in the United States / Montse Feu -- Federico Arcos (1920-2015): an Iberian anarchist exile / David Watson.
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction Hispanic Anarchist Print Culture: Writing from Below -- Part I: Transatlantic Origins -- 1. Spanish Republicanism and the Press The Political Socialization of Anarchists in the United States (1880s-1910s) -- 2. Globetrotters and Rebels Correspondents of the Spanish-Language Anarchist Press, 1886-1918 -- Part II: Latino Labor and Anarchism in the United States -- 3. Anarchism and the End of Empire José Cayetano Campos, Labor, and Cuba Libre -- 4. Red Florida in the Caribbean Red Hispanic Anarchist Transnational Networks and Radical Politics, 1880s-1920s -- 5. Spanish-speaking Anarchists in the United States The Newspaper Cultura Obrera and Its Transnational Networks (1911-1927) -- 6. Spanish Firemen and Maritime Syndicalism, 1902-1940 -- Part III: Anarquistas on the Frontier -- 7. Moving West Jaime Vidal, Anarchy, and the Mexican Revolution, 1904-1918 -- 8. Caritina M. Piña and Anarcho-syndicalism Labor Activism in the Greater Mexican Borderlands, 1910-1930 -- 9. Traces of the Revista Única Appearances and Disappearances of Anarchism in Steubenville, 1909-1973 -- Part IV: Imagining a New World -- 10. The Anarchist Imaginary Max Nettlau and Latin America, 1890-1934 -- 11. Reflections of the United States Through the Pages of La Revista Blanca, 1923-1936 -- 12. Transnational Anarchist Culture in the Interwar Period The Magazine Estudios (1928-1937) -- Part V: Spanish Civil War and Exile -- 13. Keepsakes of the Revolution Transnational Networks and the U.S. Circulation of Anarchist Propaganda during the Spanish Civil War -- 14. España Libre (1939-1977) Anarchist Literature and Antifascism in the United States -- 15. Federico Arcos (1920-2015) An Iberian Anarchist Exile -- Epilogue -- Appendix A Periodicals (selected).
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"Writing Revolution examines the international movement of Spanish-speaking anarchists who sought social and economic freedom in the United States. Scholars from Latin America, Spain, and the United States will trace the nineteenth-century origins of Spanish-language anarchism and explore the manner in which its ideas and practices crossed borders in the Americas and deeply influenced the development of U.S. Spanish-speaking culture and society from the nineteenth through the twentieth century. This is a book that not only explores the evolution and development of anarchist thought and action, it examines how people widely dispersed over time but who had a shared language and perspective on authoritarian regimes found solidarity through communication and work. Transnational Libertad proposes a global approach to U.S. Hispanic anarchist history, culture, and legacy by examining transnational channels and networks, particularly the anarchist press"--
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