Mundo Hispánico Explained

Frequency:Monthly
Founded:1948
Firstdate:February 1948
Finaldate:December 1977
Finalnumber:357
Country:Spain
Based:Madrid
Language:Spanish

Mundo Hispánico (Spanish; Castilian: Hispanic World) was a monthly cultural and political magazine which existed between 1948 and 1977. The subtitle of the magazine was La revista de veintitrés países (Spanish; Castilian: The Twenty-Three Country Magazine) which indicated the fact that it did not only target readers in Spain, but also those in Latin America. It was one of the publications which supported the Francoist rule.[1]

History and profile

Mundo Hispánico was launched in Madrid in February 1948.[2] Alfredo Sánchez Bella was the founder of the magazine which was published by the Institute of Hispanic Culture (IHC).[2] [3] It was the second publication launched by the IHC.[4] Its format was large, and the magazine contained full-colour photographs.[4] Mundo Hispánico folded in December 1977 after the publication of its 357th issue.[2]

Contributors and content

Major contributors of Mundo Hispánico included Tono, Miguel Mihura, López Rubio, Estebita, Máximo, Cebrián, Mena, Munoa, Picazo, Chumy Chúmez, Cesc, Luis Medrano and Zeus.[5] Enrique Herreros worked for the magazine being responsible for the selection of the drawings.[5]

Frequent topics featured in Mundo Hispánico were Spain’s colonial past, classical and contemporary Spanish art and architecture, technical innovations, Spanish cinema and fashion and bullfighting.[4] It published special issues for the leading figures of the Spanish cultural tradition such as the painter Francisco Goya.[6] In addition, Mundo Hispánico responded the negative reports and comments about Spain by the US magazines such as Life.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Javier Ortiz Echagüe. Mundo Hispánico versus Life: "Spanish Village" by W. Eugene Smith and the Debate over Spain in Illustrated Magazines (1949-1952). 2014. Communication & Society. 27. 23–57. 1.
  2. Web site: Mundo Hispánico. 3 July 2022. Miguel de Cervantes Virtual Library. es.
  3. Daniel Gunnar Kressel. The Hispanic Community of Nations: the Spanish-Argentine nexus and the imagining of a Hispanic Cold War bloc. Cahiers des Amériques latines. 2015. 79. 79 . 115–133. 10.4000/cal.3669. free.
  4. Johannes Großmann. 'Baroque Spain' As Metaphor. Hispanidad, Europeanism and Cold War Anti-Communism in Francoist Spain. 91. Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 2014. 5. 761. 10.1080/14753820.2014.909144. 154348031.
  5. Web site: Proyectos en torno a la revista "Mundo Hispánico" (1948-1977). 3 July 2022. AECID. es. 7 April 2020.
  6. Claudia Grego March. Painting Viciously: Antonio Saura's Monsters and The Francoist Dictatorship (1939-1975). React/Review: A Responsive Journal for Art & Architecture. 2022. 2. 87. 247258956. 10.5070/R52056631. free.