RT Book, Section T1 After the Fear was Over? What Came After Dictatorships in Spain, Greece, and Portugal A1 Graham, Helen A1 Quiroga Fernández De Soto, Alejandro A2 Stone, Dane AB What Spain, Greece, and Portugal have in common in the twentieth century is the manner in which their internal processes of change – rural to urban, agrarian to industrial – were intervened in and inflected at crucial moments and with enduring effect by the force of international political agendas. By the 1960s, in all three countries, the fearful imaginaries of traditionalists still saw a disguised form of communism in the ‘godlessness’ of Americanisation, social liberalisation, and anti-puritanism. This article adopts a tripartite structure (1945: survival; 1970s: transition; after 1989: memory) in order to explore why, how, and with what consequences Southern European political establishments with clear Nazi links or empathies not only survived the collapse of Adolf Hitler's new order, but were also able to persist as dictatorial and authoritarian regimes into the 1970s. It then interrogates the nature of the subsequent transitions to parliamentary democracy, paying particular attention to the continuities. It is remarkable, even today, how few Western European or North American commentators understand the brutality beneath the burlesque of dictatorship in Southern Europe. PB Oxford University Press SN 978–0–19–956098–1 YR 2012 FD 2012 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/116331 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/116331 LA eng NO Graham, Helen, and Alejandro Quiroga, ' After the Fear was Over? What Came After Dictatorships in Spain, Greece, and Portugal', in Dan Stone (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History (2012; online edn, Oxford Academic, 18 Sept. 2012), DS Docta Complutense RD 22 abr 2025