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Juan Carulla

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Juan Carulla
Born
Juan Emiliano Carulla

(1888-07-20)July 20, 1888
DiedNovember 20, 1968(1968-11-20)(aged 80)
OccupationPhysician
Known forPolitical writer
Notable workGenio de la Argentina(1943)

Juan Emiliano Carulla(20 July 1888 - 20 November 1968) was anArgentinephysician andnationalistpolitician. He was most prominent under the military regime in power during the early 1930s.

In France

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A native of theEntre Ríos Province,Carulla trained as a medical doctor.[1]In his early years, Carulla was a supporter of anarchism but this changed after a trip to Europe during theFirst World War.Carulla enlisted in theFrench Armyas a field doctor and became convinced that thelefthad done nothing to help the war effort.[2]Whilst in France he became a strong supporter ofAction Française.[3]Like many of his contemporaries in France, Carulla had been exposed to thesyndicalismofGeorges Sorelwhich, despite its avowedly leftist bent, was influential on theintegrismofCharles Maurraswith a number of French leftists of the time switching to thisfar rightcreed.[1]

Argentine far-right

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Following his return to Argentina, Carulla established his own journal,La Voz Nacional,in 1925. He showed strong support for Germany and a preference for tradition and heredity as the bases of government.[1]He became associated with the followers ofLeopoldo Lugonesand, along withRodolfo Irazusta,helped to found and edit the journalLa Nueva República(LNR) in 1927.[3]He also produced his own journalBandera Argentinawhich campaigned strongly againstfemale suffrage,dismissing it as "insanity".[4]This journal contained the writings in which Carulla came closest to endorsing the fascism that was growing in Europe at the time.[1]In his memoirs he admitted that this journal had received assistance from the German embassy.[5]His work withLNRwas pivotal to the development of Argentina's anti-establishmentfar rightas it represented a break from the old traditionalism and a new endorsement of corporatism and a fascist-inspired nationalism.[6]In his work for the magazine Carulla emphasisedanti-Semitismand wrote of perceived Jewish conspiracies to take over Argentina.[7]

Along withJulio Irazusta,Carulla asked right-wing GeneralJosé Félix Uriburuto lead a coup against the liberal government ofHipólito Yrigoyenin 1927. The general declined at that stage but did so in 1930, forming a new right-wing dictatorship in which Carulla enjoyed influence.[8]He was to form part of the Maurras-inspired elite, alongside the Irazusta brothers,Ernesto Palacio,Bruno Jacovella and others, who took up their pens in defence of the new regime and effectively supplied it with an ideology.[9]Cerulla in particular enjoyed strong influence and it was he who was behind the idea of merging all Uriburu's supporters into one militia group, theArgentine Civic Legion,under the general's government, a move that was seen as pivotal in the fascistisation of the Uriburu regime.[10]He was also involved in a number of rightist groups, all of which were pro-Uriburu, including theRepublican League,a group patterned afterAction Française,theNational Partyestablished by Alberto Viñas and Carlos Silveyra in 1930, and theAgrupación Teniente General Uriburuset up in 1932.[1]

Later writing

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He was strongly interested in the cultural implications of the Spanish language, and in his bookGenio de la Argentina(1943) he wrote that the common language formed a strong basis for close links with Spain, thus endorsing theHispanidadideas championed byManuel Gálvez.[11]He was also a harsh critic of democracy, arguing that it was a product of theFrench Revolutionthat was alien and irrelevant to Hispanic countries, which, he contended, required authoritarian governments.[11]He further believed in the importance of the family and looked toFrancisco Francoin his desire to establish a "juvenileFalange"in which young men would be organised at the disposal of the government.[11]

Carulla abandoned his fascist sympathies in the late 1940s and played little role in public life thereafter.[1]His autobiography,Al Filo del Medio Siglo,was published in 1951.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcdefgPhilip Rees,Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890,Simon & Schuster, 1990, p. 55
  2. ^Sandra McGee Deutsch,Las Derechas,1999, pp. 195-6
  3. ^abRoger Griffin & Matthew Feldman,Fascism: The "Fascist Epoch",2004, p. 353
  4. ^Sandra McGee Deutsch,Las Derechas,1999, pp. 235-6
  5. ^Graciela Ben-Dror,The Catholic Church and the Jews,2009, p. 87
  6. ^Michael A. Burdick,For God and the Fatherland,1995, p. 30
  7. ^F. Finchelstein,The Ideological Origins of the Dirty War: Fascism, Populism, and Dictatorship in Twentieth Century Argentina,Oxford University Press, 2014, p. 59
  8. ^Sandra McGee Deutsch,Las Derechas,1999, p. 197
  9. ^Cyprian Blamires,World Fascism,2006, p. 56
  10. ^Robert A. Potash,The Army & Politics in Argentina: 1928-1945,1969, p. 67
  11. ^abcC.L. Callahan,The Impact of the Spanish Civil War on Argentine Nationalist Intellectual ThoughtArchived2018-08-08 at theWayback Machine