Forms of charisma: the dominated voice in judicial sources, 1875-1890

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70794/hs.115986

Keywords:

Everyday resistance, domination, hidden discourse, judicial sources, rural society

Abstract

The article investigates the recorded voices of those who confronted the elites of their community with the purpose of analyzing the opinions that circulated among the weak or fed their political language. The words of subordinate groups have gained greater interest and much more complex meanings due to the impact on the historiography of the work of James C. Scott. Forms of charisma and crowd action reveal a hidden discourse in subordination and shed light on the less visible face of power relations. The funds of the Territorial Court of Albacete during the last decades of the 19th century have provided the main documentary source for this work.

Author Biography

Óscar Bascuñán Añover, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Ph.D. in History from the University of Castilla-La Mancha and Professor of the Department of Modern and Contemporary History at the Complutense University of Madrid. He is the author of two monographs: Protesta y Supervivencia (2008), and Campesinos Rebeldes (2009). He has published articles in journals such as Historia Social, Historia Agraria, Historia y Política, Vínculos de Historia, Revista de Historiografía, Hispania, Hispania Nova, Historia Contemporánea, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies and Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez. His lines of research are framed in the study of everyday resistance, collective action, crime and popular justice in Spain in the last decades of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Published

2025-05-15

Issue

Section

Dossier

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