Political Science departmental doctoral seminar - "Catholic Church, State and Social and Cultural Conflicts in Twentieth-Century Spain”
The Department of Political Science and the Doctoral School of Political Science, Public Policy and International Relations cordially invite you to the talk by
Julián Casanova Ruiz
(Professor of History, University of Zaragoza, Visiting Professor of Political Science and History at CEU)
"Catholic Church, State and Social and Cultural Conflicts in Twentieth-Century Spain”
13.30, Thursday, October 11 at FT#809
http://pds.ceu.hu/pols_seminars
Julián Casanova, is Professor of Contemporary History at the University of Zaragoza. His publications include La historia social y los historiadores (Crítica, Barcelona, 1991), De la calle al frente. El anarcosindicalismo en España, 1931-1939 (Crítica, Barcelona, 1997, translated into English Anarchism, the Republic and Civil War in Spain: 1931-1939, Routledge, London and New York, 2005), La Iglesia de Franco (Temas de Hoy, (Madrid, 2001; Crítica, Barcelona, 2005); República y guerra civil (Crítica, Barcelona, 2007; English edition, The Spanish Republic and Civil War, in Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2010), with Carlos Gil, Historia de España en el siglo XX (Ariel, Barcelona, 2009, forthcoming at Cambridge University Press); and Europa contra Europa, 1914-1945 (Crítica, Barcelona, 2011). His last book is A Short History of the Spanish Civil War (I.B. Tauris, October 2012). Professor Casanova is also the editor of Morir, matar, sobrevivir. La violencia en la dictadura de Franco (Critica, Barcelona, 2002); Tierra y Libertad. Cien años de anarquismo en España (Crítica, Barcelona, 2010) and co-author of El pasado oculto. Fascismo y violencia en Aragón, 1936-1939 (Siglo XXI, Madrid, 1992), and Victimas de la guerra civil (Temas de Hoy, Madrid, 1999). Professor Casanova has been Visiting Professor in several and prestigious Universities of England, USA and South America, among them Queen Mary College (London), Harvard University, University of Notre Dame, New School for Social Research (New York), FLACSO (Quito) and Centrel European University (Budapest). He is member of the Editorial Committe of the journal Historia Social and member of the Advisary Board of The International Journal of Iberian Studies (Bradford, England) and Cuadernos de Historia de España (Buenos Aires, Argentina).