Abstract

Cinema played an important role as a vehicle for propaganda during the Spanish Civil War. The films produced by the Republicans and the Nationalists had two things in common: first, a desire to assert their side's legitimacy and the legality of their actions in defence of the country; and second, a desire to pour scorn on the enemy. Examples of the latter abound in the language used: Republican productions branded the military rebels as ‘fascists’, ‘traitors without honour’, ‘ferocious beasts’, while the Nationalist films called the Republicans ‘reds’, ‘Marxist swine’, or ‘ragmen of the Popular Front’.

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