Guardianes del Honor. Los guardias civiles y la historia de su institución durante la Segunda República
Abstract
The Civil Guard is an essential part of the story of the political violence that plagued the Second Republic, and its history has largely been written by members of the institution itself eagerly defending its honour. This article traces how specific incidences of violence during the Second Republic were portrayed by Civil Guard historians in books and history magazine articles from 1968 to the present, and in so doing it will demonstrate that, even as Spain shifted from a public order to a citizen security model of policing during the Transition, these historians remained trapped by a Francoist vision of the Civil Guard gaining honour through dispassionately fighting the disorder of the Second Republic. The vision was so engrained that only a new generation trained after the Transition was able to find a new narrative that portrayed the Civil Guard as serving the interests of the public. Still, the unwavering desire to uphold the honour of the institution has meant that this new generation also depicts the corps as apolitical.
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