British representations of the Spanish Civil War

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Brian Shelmerdine
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It is seven decades since the start of the Spanish Civil War, and yet, as its repeated use as a signifier of idealism in fiction illustrates, impressions made during, or arising from, the conflict continue to resound. However, little regard has been given to the imagery and language employed by British commentators in their representations of events during the years of the Second Republic, although the value of such an approach has been demonstrated in an examination of contemporary British perceptions of Nazi Germany. It is the argument here that representations of Spain during the Second Republic and especially during the Civil War served in no small measure to ensure that in the public mind Spain did indeed remain 'a far away country', one whose war was of little concern to Britain. If pursuit of non-intervention was the contentious core of British responses to the war, a multiplicity of issues and interpretations acted throughout the conflict to shape and to moderate public and political reactions. While it can be argued that the efforts of both sets of supporters to ameliorate preconceived notions met with some success, clichéd impressions of the Spanish were so deeply entrenched in British culture that even recourse to refined stereotypes did little to convince the British public of a need to get involved in what remained an essentially alien and 'distant' war.

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