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The culture of regionalism

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The Culture of Regionalism is the first international comparative study of regionalism, and provides a fresh view of the relationship between cultural regionalism, political regionalism and nationa...
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  • 01 July 2010
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This pioneering book studies the rise, heyday and demise of regionalism from the Belle Époque until the Eve of the Second World War. By using a novel comparative perspective it gives a fresh view of the relationship between cultural regionalism, political regionalism and nationalism. Storm further illuminates how during the first decades of the twentieth century the culture of regionalism slowly lost the battle against its main rival: the avant-garde.

Regional identities, like national identities, were created and sometimes even invented; and this was equally the case in France, Germany and Spain. Artists, architects and international exhibitions played a highly influential role in this process. They all appropriated, and in some cases perverted, the regionalist message showing that strong regional identities would ultimately reinforce national unity.

This book offers new perspectives to specialists of regionalism and nationalism, but will also be of interest to students of the cultural history of France, Germany and Spain and to specialists from the fields of politics, ethnology, art history, cultural studies and architectural history.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 336
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 01 July 2010
ISBN: 9780719081477
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / Art & Politics, Historiography, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, The arts: general topics, Society and culture: general

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Eric Storm has provided us with a window into European nationalism and regionalism at the turn of the twentieth century, and his book will be most valuable to cultural historians and historians of nationalism, no matter which nation they study.
Eric Storm is Lecturer in General History at Leiden University

List of plates and figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I Painting (1890–1914)
1. France
2. Germany
3. Spain
II Architecture (1900–25)
4. Germany
5. France
6. Spain
III International Exhibitions (1910–39)
7. Barcelona and Seville
8. Paris
9. Munich and Düsseldorf
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index