From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)

The objective of this paper is to recover the history of the New National Ideario (NIN), a name that synthesizes a political movement of the Paraguayan left that emerged in the late 1920s and of short existence, but which represents an original political experience in the country, both in its most g...

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Autor principal: Castels, Carlos
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Escuela de Historia 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/RIHALC/article/view/33256
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spelling I10-R364-article-332562021-12-05T17:56:58Z From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931) Del movimiento reformista a la insurrección: la izquierda paraguaya y el Nuevo Ideario Nacional (1929-1931) Castels, Carlos Paraguay Left Anarchism Paraguay Izquierda Anarquismo The objective of this paper is to recover the history of the New National Ideario (NIN), a name that synthesizes a political movement of the Paraguayan left that emerged in the late 1920s and of short existence, but which represents an original political experience in the country, both in its most general programmatic aspects as well as in the identified political strategy. According to them, it is difficult to frame this phenomenon in any of the classic political currents (anarchists, socialists and communists), although, obviously, it finds part of its root in them. Located within the heterogeneous range of Latin American political movements and experiments that emerged in the process of the University Reform that began in Córdoba in 1918, the NIN was the uniting space for a new worker-popular radicalism that led to an insurrectional movement whose most daring action it was called Toma de Encarnación, on February 19, 1931, a city that for sixteen hours was converted into a “libertarian commune”. Este trabajo se propone recuperar la historia del Nuevo Ideario Nacional (NIN), nombre que sintetiza un movimiento político de la izquierda paraguaya surgido a finales de la década de 1920 y de breve existencia, pero que representó una experiencia política original en el país, tanto en sus aspectos programáticos más generales como en la estrategia política utilizada. De acuerdo con ellos, se hace difícil encuadrar este fenómeno en alguna de las corrientes políticas clásicas (anarquistas, socialistas y comunistas), aunque, obviamente, encuentre parte de su raíz en ellas. Ubicado dentro de la heterogénea gama de experimentos y movimientos políticos latinoamericanos surgidos al calor del fenómeno de la Reforma universitaria iniciada en Córdoba en 1918, el NIN fue el espacio aglutinador de un nuevo radicalismo obrero-popular que derivó en un movimiento insurreccional cuya acción más audaz fue la llamada Toma de Encarnación, el 19 de febrero de 1931, ciudad que por dieciséis horas fue convertida en “comuna libertaria”. Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Escuela de Historia 2021-06-15 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/RIHALC/article/view/33256 Journal Red Intercátedras de Historia de América Latina Contemporánea ; No. 14 (2021): Magazine of the Red de Intercátedras de Historia de América Latina Contemporánea ; 1-23 Revista de la Red Intercátedras de Historia de América Latina Contemporánea; Núm. 14 (2021): Revista de la Red de Intercátedras de Historia de América Latina Contemporánea ; 1-23 Revista da Rede Intercátedras de História Contemporânea da América Latina ; n. 14 (2021): Revista da Rede de Intercâmbios da História Contemporânea da América Latina ; 1-23 2250-7264 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/RIHALC/article/view/33256/33700 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-364
container_title_str Revista de la Red Intercátedras de Historia de América Latina Contemporánea
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic Paraguay
Left
Anarchism
Paraguay
Izquierda
Anarquismo
spellingShingle Paraguay
Left
Anarchism
Paraguay
Izquierda
Anarquismo
Castels, Carlos
From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
topic_facet Paraguay
Left
Anarchism
Paraguay
Izquierda
Anarquismo
author Castels, Carlos
author_facet Castels, Carlos
author_sort Castels, Carlos
title From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
title_short From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
title_full From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
title_fullStr From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
title_full_unstemmed From the Reform Movement to Insurrection: the Paraguayan Left and the New National Ideary (1929-1931)
title_sort from the reform movement to insurrection: the paraguayan left and the new national ideary (1929-1931)
description The objective of this paper is to recover the history of the New National Ideario (NIN), a name that synthesizes a political movement of the Paraguayan left that emerged in the late 1920s and of short existence, but which represents an original political experience in the country, both in its most general programmatic aspects as well as in the identified political strategy. According to them, it is difficult to frame this phenomenon in any of the classic political currents (anarchists, socialists and communists), although, obviously, it finds part of its root in them. Located within the heterogeneous range of Latin American political movements and experiments that emerged in the process of the University Reform that began in Córdoba in 1918, the NIN was the uniting space for a new worker-popular radicalism that led to an insurrectional movement whose most daring action it was called Toma de Encarnación, on February 19, 1931, a city that for sixteen hours was converted into a “libertarian commune”.
publisher Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Escuela de Historia
publishDate 2021
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/RIHALC/article/view/33256
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