Tabernero Carlos
Centre for the History of Science (CEHIC),Autonomous University of BarcelonaE-mail:
Sci Context. 2018 Mar;31(1):61-83. doi: 10.1017/S0269889718000066.
Argument Franco's fascist regime in Spain (1939-1975) offers the possibility of exploring the complex relationship between media communication practices and the processes of production, circulation, and management of knowledge. The regime persistently used film, and later on television, as indoctrination and disciplining devices. These media thus served to shape the regime's representation, which largely relied on the generation of positive attitudes of adherence to the rulers through people's submission and obedience to experts. This article examines the changing nature of modernization discourses and practices, as a fundamental element of the regime's propaganda strategies, and as portrayed in documentaries produced under its rule. The rhetoric of modernization involved an explicit deficit model of knowledge management, which aimed at legitimating the regime's deeds and policies in its first decades, as we shall see regarding colonial-medical documentaries produced for the official newsreel in the 1940s. However, the focus of such rhetoric, despite its enduring political aims, had to somehow open up as the relationship between experts and non-experts changed, both in epistemological and practical terms, such as in wildlife documentary films produced for television in the 1970s, the regime's last decade.
西班牙的佛朗哥法西斯政权(1939 - 1975年)为探索媒体传播实践与知识的生产、流通及管理过程之间的复杂关系提供了可能。该政权持续利用电影,后来还利用电视,作为灌输和规训的手段。这些媒体因此有助于塑造政权的形象,这在很大程度上依赖于通过民众对专家的服从和顺从,培养民众对统治者的积极拥护态度。本文考察现代化话语与实践不断变化的本质,这是该政权宣传策略的一个基本要素,并且在其统治下制作的纪录片中有所呈现。现代化的言辞涉及一种明确的知识管理缺失模式,在其统治的头几十年里,旨在使政权的行为和政策合法化,正如我们将看到的20世纪40年代为官方新闻影片制作的殖民医学纪录片那样。然而,尽管这种言辞有着持久的政治目的,但随着专家与非专家之间的关系在认识论和实践层面发生变化,比如在20世纪70年代(该政权统治的最后十年)为电视制作的野生动物纪录片中,这种言辞的重点不得不有所拓展。