Francoist Antifeminism and the Violent Reversal of Women’s Liberation, 1936–1951
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Taylor and Francis
Date
2015-10Referencia bibliográfica
Cobo Romero, Francisco y Ortega López, Teresa María. Francoist Antifeminism and the Violent Reversal of Women’s Liberation, 1936–1951. En: Mass Killings and Violence in Spain, 1936–1952. Grappling with the Past. DOI:10.4324/9780203706404-3
Abstract
During the fi rst third of the twentieth century, the Catholic and antiliberal
Spanish right grew increasingly concerned by the growing public role
claimed by women. These fears became particularly acute with the arrival
of the Spanish Second Republic in 1931. In the fi rst years of the Republic,
women benefi ted from advanced social legislation that helped forge greater
equality, and as they swelled the ranks of political organisations they became
powerful actors in their own right. The outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in
July 1936 brought women even further to the fore. A fresh and larger wave
of women surged into a range of democratic, revolutionary and anarchist
organisations in defence of the Second Republic. The victory of the Francoists
in the Civil War, however, ushered in the reversal of reform and a concerted
effort to use violence and repression to return women to the home.
This chapter sets out to analyse the repression of women carried out by the
new regime. It does so by fi rst placing the repression in its historical context.
It goes on to analyse a range of different forms of persecution suffered by
thousands of women that included imprisonment, public humiliation, social
marginalisation and, in some cases, death.