Helen Graham (DPhil, Oxford) is a British historian. She is Professor Emeritus of Modern European History at the Department of History, Royal Holloway University of London.[1]
Her research interests span the social and cultural history of 1930s and 1940s Spain, including the Spanish Civil War; Europe in the inter-war period (1918–1939); comparative civil wars; the social construction of state power in 1940s Spain; women under Francoism; comparative gender history.
Book | Year | Type | Published | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
The French and Spanish Popular Fronts: Comparative Perspectives | 1989 | Non-fiction | Cambridge U.P. | with Martin S. Alexander |
Socialism and War. The Spanish Socialist Party in Power and Crisis 1936-1939 | 1991 | Non-fiction | Cambridge U.P. | |
Spanish Cultural Studies. An Introduction | 1995 | Non-fiction | Oxford U.P. | with Jo Labanyi |
Spain 1936. Resistance and revolution. The Flaws in the Front in Opposing Fascism | 1999 | Non-fiction | Cambridge U.P. | eds Tim Kirk & Anthony McElligott |
The Spanish Republic at War, 1936–1939 | 2002 | Non-fiction | Cambridge U.P. | |
The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short Introduction | 2005 | Non-fiction | Oxford U.P. | |
"The memory of murder: mass killing, incarceration and the making of Francoism" | 2008 | Non-fiction | in War Memories, Memory Wars. Political Violence in Twentieth-Century Spain | |
Interrogating Francoism: History and Dictatorship in Twentieth-Century Spain | 2016 | Non-fiction | Bloomsbury Publishing | |