学者、间谍和其他代理人:美国的西班牙裔与国家

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, ROMANCE
S. Faber
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:学者与现代国家之间的关系往往比我们想象的要复杂,这种复杂性尤其影响到在民族国家工作或作为其研究对象以外的民族国家公民的学术专家,包括从其他地方研究西班牙的学者。如果幸运的话,他们会得到双倍的国家支持和认可。更常见的情况是,他们被困在相互竞争的忠诚之间,或者成为一方或双方监视和骚扰的目标。现代民族国家倾向于将研究本国历史和文化的学术领域视为地位和威望的潜在来源,因此,作为其外交政策的延伸,甚至是一种影子外交。这些民族国家也渴望了解其他国家的学术知识,因此动员学者充当影子外交官,而不是影子间谍。这篇文章着眼于20世纪20年代至今,一些杰出的美国西班牙裔学者与美国和西班牙政府的关系。尽管学者的工作应该为他们的民族国家的利益服务的观念在今天不像在20世纪中期那样流行,但国家继续对西班牙学术研究的形成和演变施加影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Scholars, Spies, and Other Agents: US Hispanism and the State
ABSTRACT:The relationship between scholars and modern states is often more complex than we tend to assume, and this complexity especially affects academic experts who work in, or are citizens of, nation-states other than those that they study-including scholars who study Spain from elsewhere. If they are lucky, they receive double the state support and recognition. More often, they are caught between competing loyalties or targeted for surveillance and harassment from one or both sides. Modern nation-states have tended to consider the academic fields that study their own history and culture as a potential generator of status and prestige and, therefore, as extensions of their foreign policy and even a kind of shadow diplomacy. These same nation-states also crave scholarly knowledge about other nations, mobilizing scholars less as shadow diplomats than as shadow spies. This essay looks at the relationship of some prominent United-States-based Hispanists with the American and Spanish state between the 1920s and the present. Although the notion that scholars' work should serve the interests of their nation-state is not as prevalent today as it was in the mid-twentieth century, the state continues to exert influence of the shape and evolution of the scholarly study of Spain.
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来源期刊
Revista Hispanica Moderna
Revista Hispanica Moderna LITERATURE, ROMANCE-
CiteScore
0.10
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