The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family

This paper examines the health consequences of the Spanish Civil War for a family of Repub-lican militiamen who defended the socialist project in a divided Spain between 1936 and 1939. The consequences of the Civil War are traced in their children and grandchildren. Interviews with members of a fami...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrea Angulo Menasse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Medicine Publication Group 2009-08-01
Series:Social Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.socialmedicine.info/index.php/socialmedicine/article/view/339
id doaj-ebcc357ab52c472487ec1e2d5ff4214a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ebcc357ab52c472487ec1e2d5ff4214a2020-11-24T21:57:39ZengSocial Medicine Publication GroupSocial Medicine1557-71122009-08-0143148154The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One FamilyAndrea Angulo MenasseThis paper examines the health consequences of the Spanish Civil War for a family of Repub-lican militiamen who defended the socialist project in a divided Spain between 1936 and 1939. The consequences of the Civil War are traced in their children and grandchildren. Interviews with members of a family of socialist political exiles revealed how the war against Spanish fascism affected their lives and their bodies. As children, the adults had been forced to flee Spain for their very lives, accompanying their parents first to France and later to America. Once the war was over, those who remained in Spain were enveloped in a wave of terror which forced them to hide and then escape across the border. As socialist families in resistance, they were under constant threat of death. Based on the testimony of various generations, this paper traces the messages transmitted from grandparents to parents, from parents to children, and from grandparents to grandchildren, focusing on how those messages affected their mental health. This evidence supports my hypothesis that, in the context of war, it is not necessary to have been on the front lines to suffer the trauma caused by the material conditions of terror and persecution. Nor was it necessary to have personally suffered the experiences of exile and the persecution in 1939 to carry the burden of what the Civil War meant in terms of the loss and failure of a utopian political project. The violence was like a tattoo engraved on all generations of the family, even - and perhaps especially - on those born in the country of refuge. http://www.socialmedicine.info/index.php/socialmedicine/article/view/339dimensiones simboliccas y politicas de los problemas de enfermedad
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Angulo Menasse
spellingShingle Andrea Angulo Menasse
The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
Social Medicine
dimensiones simboliccas y politicas de los problemas de enfermedad
author_facet Andrea Angulo Menasse
author_sort Andrea Angulo Menasse
title The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
title_short The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
title_full The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
title_fullStr The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
title_full_unstemmed The Ongoing Legacy of the Spanish Civil War for One Family
title_sort ongoing legacy of the spanish civil war for one family
publisher Social Medicine Publication Group
series Social Medicine
issn 1557-7112
publishDate 2009-08-01
description This paper examines the health consequences of the Spanish Civil War for a family of Repub-lican militiamen who defended the socialist project in a divided Spain between 1936 and 1939. The consequences of the Civil War are traced in their children and grandchildren. Interviews with members of a family of socialist political exiles revealed how the war against Spanish fascism affected their lives and their bodies. As children, the adults had been forced to flee Spain for their very lives, accompanying their parents first to France and later to America. Once the war was over, those who remained in Spain were enveloped in a wave of terror which forced them to hide and then escape across the border. As socialist families in resistance, they were under constant threat of death. Based on the testimony of various generations, this paper traces the messages transmitted from grandparents to parents, from parents to children, and from grandparents to grandchildren, focusing on how those messages affected their mental health. This evidence supports my hypothesis that, in the context of war, it is not necessary to have been on the front lines to suffer the trauma caused by the material conditions of terror and persecution. Nor was it necessary to have personally suffered the experiences of exile and the persecution in 1939 to carry the burden of what the Civil War meant in terms of the loss and failure of a utopian political project. The violence was like a tattoo engraved on all generations of the family, even - and perhaps especially - on those born in the country of refuge.
topic dimensiones simboliccas y politicas de los problemas de enfermedad
url http://www.socialmedicine.info/index.php/socialmedicine/article/view/339
work_keys_str_mv AT andreaangulomenasse theongoinglegacyofthespanishcivilwarforonefamily
AT andreaangulomenasse ongoinglegacyofthespanishcivilwarforonefamily
_version_ 1725854305666203648