Cénit

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Cénit
Categories
  • Sociology magazine
  • Literary magazine
Frequency
  • Bimonthly
  • Quarterly
PublisherConfederación Nacional del Trabajo
Founded1951
Final issueOctober 1996
CountryFrance
Based inToulouse
LanguageSpanish
ISSN0754-0566
OCLC801836475

Cénit was a magazine which was founded by the exiled leftist Catalan political figures and published in Toulouse, France, between 1951 and 1996. Its subtitle was Revista de Sociología, Ciencia y Literatura (Spanish: Journal of Sociology, Science and Literature).[1]

History and profile[edit]

Cénit was launched in 1951 by the Spanish political exiles who had left Spain following the capture of Barcelona by the Francoist forces in 1939.[1][2] It was based in Toulouse and published by Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (Spanish: National Labour Confederation).[1] From its start to 1971 the magazine came out bimonthly, and then its frequency was switched to quarterly.[1] One of its editors was Federica Montseny.[3] Salvador Cano Carrillo, a Spanish militant anarchist, was among the contributors.[4] In 1954 the magazine received contributions from Benito Milla.[5] It folded in October 1996.[1]

The title of a Swedish leftist magazine, Zenith, was a reference to Cénit.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Cenit: Revista de Sociología, Ciencia y Literatura" (in Spanish). Miguel de Cervantes Virtual Library. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
  2. ^ Anna Regener (11 February 2022). "Radical Objects: Anarchist Books". History Workshop.
  3. ^ Shirley F. Fredericks (Winter 1976). "Federica Montseny and Spanish Anarchist Feminism". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 1 (3): 78. doi:10.2307/3346171. JSTOR 3346171.
  4. ^ Javier Navarro Navarro (2022). "Biography, culture and militancy in Spanish anarchism: Higinio Noja Ruiz (1894–1972)". Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies. 28 (1): 71. doi:10.1080/14701847.2022.2052691. S2CID 247770993.
  5. ^ Lucía Campanella (2022). "Two Anarchist Cultural Agents Forging the Twentieth-Century Uruguayan Cultural Field: Publishing as Soft Power". In Elisabet Carbó-Catalan; Diana Roig Sanz (eds.). Culture as Soft Power: Bridging Cultural Relations, Intellectual Cooperation, and Cultural Diplomacy. Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter. p. 241. doi:10.1515/9783110744552-011. ISBN 978-3-11-074463-7.
  6. ^ Gunnar Olofsson (2016). "A Portrait of the Sociologist as a Young Rebel: Göran Therborn 1941-1981". In Gunnar Olofsson; Sven Hort (eds.). Class, Sex and Revolutions: A Critical Appraisal of Gören Therborn. Lund: Arkiv förlag. p. 22. ISBN 9789179242978.

External links[edit]