
Located in north eastern Spain, Catalonia has long displayed the attributes of a nation: distinct language and culture, separate social and political institutions, and a strong collective identity. At the same time, it is one of Spain's centres of economic dynamism and innovation. As such, it is an especially striking instance of what has come to be known as 'minority' or 'internal' nations within a larger political order. Even after the Franco dictatorship's systematic suppression of Catalan language and culture, the idea that the Catalan nation needed to have an independent state of its own remained at the margins of Catalan politics. Yet, in recent years Catalan independence has become: the formal objective of Catalonia's nationalist parties; the focus of a strongly mobilized social movement; and the primary option of as much as half of Catalonia's electorate. This drive to independence even led to a failed unilateral declaration of independence. How can this remarkable transformation best be explained and what does it portend for the future of Catalonia and Spain? This new edition seeks to answer these questions. At the same time, the book analyzes the proposal for an independent Catalan state while also showing how the Catalan question might be resolved within Spain, by creating a multinational federation. It also explains why there is little prospect of either project coming to pass. The book demonstrates the dangers and contradictions of a state nationalism that denies the very existence of internal nations, while also exploring the terms under which such nations can be accommodated within a larger political order. On this basis, it addresses a critical challenge to the political institutions of much of Europe and North America.
How can the rapid transformation of Catalan independence from a marginal political idea to a central, mobilized movement be explained, and what are the implications for the future of the Spanish state? Kenneth McRoberts, a scholar of nationalism and political institutions, utilizes historical analysis and contemporary political data to examine the friction between Catalan identity and the Spanish state. The author argues that the suppression of Catalan culture under the Franco regime, coupled with modern economic and political shifts, has created a volatile environment where traditional state nationalism struggles to accommodate internal nations. The text evaluates the viability of both full independence and a multinational federation as potential resolutions to this ongoing conflict.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a comprehensive analysis of the structural tensions inherent in modern European nation-states. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's balanced approach to a highly polarized political subject.
Page Count:
641
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192522000
ISBN-13:
9780192522009
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