A People Betrayed
A History of Corruption, Political Incompetence and Social Division in Modern Spain 1874-2018
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3 Months Free
Buy Now for £31.42
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Narrated by:
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Peter Noble
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By:
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Paul Preston
From the foremost historian of 20th century Spain, A People Betrayed is the story of the devastating betrayal of Spain by its political class, its military and its Church.
This comprehensive history of modern Spain chronicles the fomenting of violent social division throughout the country by institutionalised corruption and startling political incompetence. Most spectacularly during the Primo de Rivera and Franco dictatorships, grotesque and shameless corruption went hand-in-hand with inept policies that prolonged Spain’s economic backwardness well into the 1950s.
A People Betrayed looks back to the years prior to 1923 when electoral corruption excluded the masses from organized politics and gave them a choice between apathetic acceptance and violent revolution. Bitter social conflict, economic tensions and conflict between centralist nationalism and regional independence movements then exploded into the civil war of 1936-1939.
It took the horrors of that war and the dictatorship that followed to break the pattern. The moderation shared by the progressive right and a chastened left underlay a bloodless transition to democracy after 1975. Yet, as before, corruption and political incompetence continued to have a corrosive effect on political coexistence and social cohesion.
Sparkling with vivid portraits of politicians and army officers, some corrupt and others clean, recounting the triumphs and disasters of Kings Alfonso XIII and Juan Carlos, A People Betrayed unravels the mystery of why both right and left have been unable or unwilling to deal with corruption and the pernicious clash between Spanish centralist nationalism and regional desires for independence.
Critic reviews
Financial Times
Sunday Times
Guardian
beyond that, can impart his knowledge in swift muscular prose. His bias towards the underdog is humane and tonic’ Daily Telegraph
Kirkus Reviews
I've read other reviews on here criticising the Spanish pronunciation of Paul Noble. I think they're confusing the differences in Spanish pronunciation and Catalan where "j" is not an "h", but a "dz" sound. Paul Noble's narration is excellent throughout.
Essential Spanish history
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However, the narration is ruining it. Why couldn't they get a narrator who speaks Spanish? Juan and Joachim are pronounced as a hard "h", not a "J", I really could go on and on but don't wish to be any more unkind than I have.
Almost ruined by the narration
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Jaw dropping
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Very interesting
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An eye-opener
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