During the Portuguese dictatorship, state-sponsored art and propaganda were wielded by the regime to enforce control and promote nationalist ideologies. The National Propaganda Secretariat, led by António Ferro, controlled artistic production and dissemination, shaping narratives and suppressing dissent. Artists relation to and with the regime's visual landscape is a complex, multifolded and not always easy to read one.
Join us as we look at a few examples and see how tentacular Salazar's rule was.
#CorkOutHistory #HistoryPodcast #Salazar #StateArt
1974 Revolution: 25. A New Dawn
1974 Revolution: 24. Celeste and Her Carnations
1974 Revolution: 23. Radio Waves and Signal Songs
1974 Revolution: 22. MFA and Salgueiro Maia
1974 Revolution: 21. Interlude
1974 Revolution: 20. Marcello Caetano
1974 Revolution: 19. Falling Chair
1974 Revolution: 18. Resistance & Protest Songs
1974 Revolution: 17. Deviants
1974 Revolution: 16. Radio
1974 Revolution: 15. Tarrafal Concentration Camp
1974 Revolution: 14. Colonial War
1974 Revolution: 13. WWII & Salazar's Neutrality
1974 Revolution: 12. The Blue Pencil Censorship
1974 Revolution: 11. Women before the Revolution
1974 Revolution: 10. Emigration
1974 Revolution: 08. Portuguese Youth & Portuguese Legion
1974 Revolution: 07. God, Fatherland and Family - Fatima, Fado and Football
1974 Revolution: 06. PIDE - The Political Police
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