From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Propaganda in Spain has a long history,
[1]
[2]
[3] and in the modern times has been studied in the context of the propaganda of the
Spanish Civil War
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7] and propaganda of the
Francoist Spain (1939-1975).
[8]
[9]
^ Hillgarth, J. N. (1966). "Coins and Chronicles: Propaganda in Sixth-Century Spain and the Byzantine Background". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte . 15 (4): 483–508.
JSTOR
4434955 .
^ Ramage, Ε S. (1998-02-01). "Augustus' Propaganda in Spain". Klio (in German). 80 (2): 434–490.
doi :
10.1524/klio.1998.80.2.434 .
S2CID
164741472 .
^ Rhodes, Dennis E.; Walsh, James E. (1986).
"Spanish propaganda printed in Venice: Two dialogues by Alfonso de Valdés" . Harvard Library Bulletin . New Series.
^ Hardin, Jennifer Roe (2013).
Fighting for Spain through the Media: Visual Propaganda as a Political Tool in the Spanish Civil War (Thesis). Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences.
^ Basilio, Miriam (2002). Re-inventing Spain: Images of the nation in painting and propaganda, 1936–1943 (Thesis).
OCLC
53234858 .
^ Basilio, Dr Miriam (2014-01-17).
Visual Propaganda, Exhibitions, and the Spanish Civil War . Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
ISBN
978-1-4094-6481-5 .
^ Greeson, Helen (2012-05-11).
Gendering the Republic and the Nation: Political Poster Art of the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939 (Thesis).
^ Basilio, Miriam (2002). "Genealogies for a New State: Painting and Propaganda in Franco's Spain, 1936-1940". Discourse . 24 (3): 67–94.
doi :
10.1353/dis.2003.0030 .
S2CID
143243878 .
Project MUSE
48707 .
^ Ruiz, Beatriz Correyero (2003-01-01).
"La propaganda turística española en los años del aislamiento internacional" . Historia y Comunicación Social (in Spanish). 8 : 47–61.
Sovereign states States with limited recognition