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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-014.mrc:68607785:9364
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-014.mrc:68607785:9364?format=raw

LEADER: 09364pam a22003734a 4500
001 6816216
005 20221122052529.0
008 080305r20081972iluab b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2008010291
020 $a9781931859516 (pbk.)
020 $a1931859515 (pbk.)
024 $a99821017321
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn213133413
035 $a(OCoLC)213133413
035 $a(NNC)6816216
035 $a6816216
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dYDX$dBAKER$dYDXCP$dOrLoB-B
041 1 $aeng$hfre
043 $ae-sp---
050 00 $aDP269$b.B813 2008
082 00 $a946.081$222
100 1 $aBroué, Pierre.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50042785
240 10 $aRévolution et la guerre d'Espagne.$lEnglish$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2008015686
245 14 $aThe revolution and the Civil War in Spain /$cby Pierre Broué and Émile Témime ; translated by Tony White.
260 $aChicago, Ill. :$bHaymarket Books :$bTrade distribution in the U.S., Consortium Book Sales,$c2008.
300 $a590 pages :$billustrations, maps ;$c22 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
500 $aOriginally published: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 1972.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 562-576) and index.
505 00 $gChapter 1.$tOligarchs and Republicans -- $tA country weighed down by its past -- $tA semicolonial country -- $tThe structure of Spanish society -- $tThe agrarian question -- $tThe Church -- $tThe Spanish Army -- $tThe bourgeoisie -- $tThe Spanish aristocracy and the conservative parties -- $tAccion Popular -- $tThe military plot -- $tThe Falange -- $tThe Autonomist Republicans -- $tThe bourgeois Republicans -- $tSpain and the labor movement -- $gChapter 2.$tThe Labor Movement -- $tThe Anarchists -- $tBakunin's ideas -- $tAnarcho-Syndicalism -- $tThe CNT-FAI -- $tThe Anarchist leaders: Durruti -- $tThe Socialists -- $tThe beginnings of the Socialist party -- $tFrom reformism to revolution? -- $tLargo Caballero and the labor alliance -- $tIndalecio Prieto -- $tCNT and UGT -- $tThe Communists -- $tThe Stalinist Communists: the Spanish Communist party, the PSUC. and the JSU -- $tThe dissident Communists: The POUM -- $gChapter 3.$tThe Prologue to the Revolution -- $tThe electoral campaign: Right against Left -- $tResult of the elections -- $tThe aftermath of the elections: the government -- $tA revolutionary situation -- $tCaballero's role -- $tPrieto's efforts -- $tCounterrevolutionary terrorism by the Falange -- $tPreparations for the military uprising -- $tThe government's attitude -- $gChapter 4.$tPronunciamiento and Revolution -- $tThe building strike -- $tThe murder of Calvo Sotelo -- $tThe insurrection in Morocco -- $tThe Republican government and the uprising -- $tThe Martinez Barrio government -- $tThe Movimiento: success and failure -- $tA Movimiento victory: Andalusia -- $tA Movimiento victory: Saragossa -- $tAn unexpected success: Oviedo -- $tA setback for the soldiers: the Fleet -- $tA Movimiento defeat: Barcelona -- $tA setback for the Movimiento: Madrid. A setback for the Movimiento: Malaga -- $tA setback for the Movimiento: the Basque provinces -- $tIn Valencia: the garrison does not revolt -- $tThe situation on the evening of 20 July -- $gChapter 5.$tDual Power in Republican Spain -- $tThe power of the armed groups -- $tTerror against the Catholic Church -- $tThe power of the Committees -- $tThe Antifascist Militias Committee in Catalonia. Origins. Composition and role -- $tConflict of power in Valencia -- $tOther revolutionary governments -- $tA special case: the Basque provinces -- $tOutline for a new state apparatus -- $tThe militias -- $tThe power of the state -- $gChapter 6.$tThe Revolutionary Gains -- $tThe problem of the Church -- $tIndustrial property -- $tCollectivization in the countryside -- $tCollectivization and the problem of power -- $tEfforts at economic control -- $tEconomics, politics, and war -- $gChapter 7.$tFrom Revolution to Civil War -- $tThe balance of military power -- $tThe balance is upset -- $tThe Nationalist offensive -- $tThreat to Madrid -- $tThe terror -- $gChapter 8.$tThe Liquidation of Revolutionary Power -- $tCommittees and soviets -- $tThe international context -- $tThe supporters of the restoration of the Republican state -- $tThe left-wing Socialists at the crossroads -- $tThe Anarchists faced with power -- $tThe formation of the Largo Caballero government -- $tThe dissolution of the Antifascist Militias Committee -- $tAragon's entry into Republican order -- $tThe Anarchists join the Central Government -- $tA decisive political factor: Russian aid -- $gChapter 9.$tThe Caballero Government and the Restoration of the State -- $tThe government versus the Committees -- $tLegal reform -- $tThe rebuilding of the police force -- $tThe militarization of the militias -- $tThe 'legalization' of the revolutionary gains -- $tRetreat by the Anarchists -- $tThe Communist upsurge -- $tBalance sheet of the Restoration -- $gChapter 10.$tMadrid: No Pasaran -- $tA city to capture -- $tThe defence of Madrid: General Miaja and the Junta -- $tThe Junta's methods -- $tThe November fighting -- $tTerror by air raid -- $tThe turning point -- $tThe battles of encirclement -- $tThe implications of Guadalajara -- $gChapter 11.$tThe Break up of the Antifascist Coalition -- $tExternal pressures: The problem of Morocco -- $tRelations with the USSR -- $tRight-wing opposition makes headway -- $tThe fall of Malaga: general coalition against Largo Caballero -- $tThe conflict between the CNT and the Communist party -- $tCaballero versus the Communist party -- $tThe rise of the revolutionary opposition -- $tAn explosive situation -- $tThe Barcelona May Days -- $tSignificance of the May Days -- $tImmediate consequences of the May Days -- $tThe fall of Largo Caballero -- $gChapter 12.$tThe Negrin Government and the Liquidation of the Opposition -- $tJuan Negrin -- $tThe suppression of the POUM -- $tThe murder of Andres Nin -- $tThe dissolution of the Aragon Defense Council -- $tThe liquidation of the loyal opposition -- $tThe establishment of an apparatus for repression -- $tThe SIM -- $tThe Strong state -- $gChapter 13.$tEurope and the War -- $tThe European balance and the Spanish Civil War -- $tThe recognition of the Nationalist government -- $tThe formation of the Axis -- $tThe French position -- $tNonintervention -- $tThe Nonintervention Committee -- $tPlans for control -- $gChapter 14.$tGerman-Italian Intervention -- $tItalian intervention -- $tParticipation by the Italians in military operations -- $tItalian debts -- $tGerman intervention -- $tHISMA -- $tGerman-Nationalist mining agreements -- $tMembership in the Anticomintern Pact -- $gChapter 15.$tRussian aid and the International Brigades -- $tStalin's Russia and the Spanish Civil War -- $tInitial neutrality -- $tThe turning point in autumn 1936 -- $tMaterial aid -- $tRussian aid: men -- $tThe first international volunteers -- $tThe International Brigades -- $tRecruitment of the brigades -- $tThe base at Albacete -- $tOrganization of the brigades -- $gChapter 16.$tThe Conquest of the North -- $tThe Northern front -- $tThe campaign for Bilbao -- $tThe diversion: Brunete -- $tThe battle of Brunete -- $tThe campaign against Santander -- $tCapitulation by the Basques -- $tThe end of Asturias -- $tBelchite -- $gChapter 17.$tPolitical Evolution in Nationalist Spain -- $tThe men of the new regime -- $tThe Nationalist provisional government -- $tGeneral Franco -- $tThe single party -- $tPolitical resistance -- $tThe Church's involvement -- $tThe new Nationalist faces -- $gChapter 18.$tThe Organization of the New State -- $tThe maintenance of law and order -- $tPurges and surveillance -- $tThe National-Syndicalist state -- $tThe principle of unity -- $tThe Church and the new state -- $tThe Church and education -- $tHispanidad -- $tThe Nationalist Army -- $gChapter 19.$tTeruel, Turning Point of the War -- $tConditions for the offensive -- $tThe battle of Teruel -- $tThe Nationalist counteroffensive -- $tThe battle of Aragon -- $tGeneralization of the offensive -- $tThe dismissal of Prieto -- $gChapter 20.$tThe Abandonment of the Republic -- $tThe Deutschland affair -- $tPiracy in the Mediterranean -- $tThe triumph of Chamberlain's policy -- $tFrance's final hesitations -- $tThe London Plan -- $tThe withdrawal of the volunteers -- $tMunich and Spain: the Spaniards and the European crisis -- $tNationalist neutrality in the Czech crisis -- $gChapter 21.$tThe Battle of the Ebro and the Campaign in Catalonia -- $tThe offensive: a political necessity -- $tThe crossing of the Ebro -- $tThe battle of attrition -- $tCatalonia before the attack -- $tThe loss of Barcelona -- $tThe flight toward the frontier -- $tThe capitulation of Minorca -- $tThe Negrin government and the problem of peace -- $gChapter 22.$tThe Casado Junta and the Winding up of the Republic -- $tThe Negrin government in France -- $tThe government's return to Spain -- $tA new civil war? -- $tThe Casado Junta -- $tFailure of negotiations for an honorable peace -- $tExile -- $tSpain after the war.
651 0 $aSpain$xHistory$yCivil War, 1936-1939.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85126106
700 1 $aTémime, Émile.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85302961
852 00 $bglx$hDP269$i.B813 2008