Actos carismáticos: la voz dominada en las fuentes judiciales, 1875-1890
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2025
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Fundación Instituto de Historia Social - Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
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Óscar Bascuñán Añover, “Actos carismáticos: la voz dominada en las fuentes judiciales, 1875-1890”, Historia Social, núm. 112 (2025), pp. 131-152.
Abstract
El artículo indaga en las voces registradas de quienes se enfrentaron a las élites de su comunidad con el propósito de analizar las opiniones que circulaban entre los débiles o alimentaban su lenguaje político. Las palabras de los grupos subordinados han cobrado mayor interés y unos significados mucho más complejos debido al impacto en la historiografía de la obra de James C. Scott. Las acciones carismáticas descubren en la subordinación un discurso oculto y arrojan luz sobre la cara menos visible de las relaciones de poder. Los fondos de la Audiencia Territorial de Albacete durante las últimas décadas del siglo xix han proporcionado la base documental principal de este trabajo.
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 of 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.
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 of 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.