183:. He argued in 1941 that Argentina should adopt a neutral position and should instead concentrate on strengthening its own army in order to ensure it could defend itself rather than spending on supporting the American war effort. His views influenced
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and rather endorsed an isolationist policy for
Argentina. Suspicious of all overseas powers, with the exception of France which he declared his support for in 1939, he argued in early 1941 that "today our worst enemies are the
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from the movement, citing the "lumpen" nature of what was approaching a mass movement, as well as it ties to mainstream conservatism. As a consequence of de Laferrère's split other nationalist intellectuals followed suit.
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as well what the nationalists portrayed as a history of mistreatment at the hands of
Britain through a series of loans with very high interest rates after independence, British involvement in the independence of
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He was a strong critic of democracy, denouncing the trust it placed in ignorant masses. He was one of the main developers of the belief within
Argentine nationalist thought that
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73:, a conservative nationalist journal. Like many of the nationalist leaders de Laferrère was an academic and in 1938 he joined the likes of the Irazusta brothers,
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writer and political activist. He was one of the leading figures in the nationalist movement active amongst a group of leading intellectuals in the 1930s.
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and the settling of her borders at the expense of
Argentina and a form of commercial imperialism that de Laferrère felt had caused the
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should not become a political party and he clashed with
Irazusta over the issue when the latter suggested presenting a list for the
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youth movement around 1927, the aim of which was to undermine the government. The group was united by the members hatred of
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was a common feature of nationalist rhetoric in
Argentina, deriving in part from the issue's surrounding the
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and he scoffed at what he saw as Perón's cowardice when he was ousted from the
Presidency in 1955.
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should support the
Independent Socialists, was endorsed and Irazusta resigned from the movement.
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Unlike some of his fellow nationalists de Laferrère was not an enthusiastic supporter of
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De Laferrère came from one of
Argentina's leading patrician families. He was of partial
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soon became a centre for the publication of highly conservative scholarship in which
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Authoritarian
Argentina: The Nationalist Movement, Its History and Its Impact
175:
Like many of his nationalist colleagues de Laferrère had a strong strain of
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61:, arguing that "democracy hands us over unarmed to these forces of extreme
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Las Derechas: The Extreme Right in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, 1890-1939
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descent although on his mother's side his ancestors included
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Social origins of counterrevolution in Argentina, 1900-1932.
158:in 1931 Laferrère began to wane in his support for
225:Falkland or Malvinas Islands sovereignty dispute
133:Miguel Primo de Rivera, 2nd Marquis of Estella
276:, University of California Press, 1995, p. 99
179:in his thought and this increased during the
8:
339:
337:
310:
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453:Republican League (Argentina) politicians
302:, Cambridge University Press, 1991, p. 32
263:, Stanford University Press, 1999, p. 197
119:although significant elements within the
16:Argentinean writer and political activist
26:- 31 January 1963, Buenos Aires) was an
252:
300:The Cambridge History of Latin America
195:, de Laferrère was not a supporter of
135:. De Laferrère was insistent that the
97:about Argentina's past loomed large.
7:
458:20th-century Argentine male writers
154:Following the establishment of the
463:Argentine male non-fiction writers
448:Argentine people of French descent
14:
438:20th-century Argentine historians
87:Instituto Juan Manuel de Rosas
1:
208:. Tomorrow they could be the
187:, who had been appointed as
162:and eventually withdrew his
443:Argentine political writers
191:. However, despite his own
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131:as well as the ideas of
57:was merely a prelude to
409:Authoritarian Argentina
396:Authoritarian Argentina
383:Authoritarian Argentina
370:Authoritarian Argentina
329:Authoritarian Argentina
69:". He wrote widely for
343:Sandra McGee Deutsch,
259:Sandra McGee Deutsch,
221:anti-British sentiment
156:Argentine Civic Legion
95:historical revisionism
123:were inspired by the
234:Argentine Civil Wars
185:Enrique Ruiz Guiñazú
85:in establishing the
48:Juan Manuel de Rosas
20:Roberto de Laferrère
143:. De Laferrère and
109:he established the
44:Encarnación Ezcurra
160:José Félix Uriburu
147:'s idea, that the
22:(10 January 1900,
117:Hipólito Yrigoyen
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298:Leslie Bethell,
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189:Foreign Minister
181:Second World War
177:anti-Americanism
164:Liga Republicana
129:Benito Mussolini
112:Liga Republicana
107:Rodolfo Irazusta
101:Liga Republicana
75:Carlos Ibarguren
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357:Las Derechas
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316:Las Derechas
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287:Las Derechas
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272:David Rock,
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145:Juan Carulla
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24:Buenos Aires
19:
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433:1963 deaths
428:1900 births
171:Later years
105:Along with
34:Nationalism
28:Argentinean
422:Categories
247:References
241:Juan Perón
55:liberalism
355:Deutsch,
314:Deutsch,
285:Deutsch,
91:Instituto
71:La Fronda
63:socialism
59:communism
411:, p. 161
398:, p. 116
385:, p. 130
372:, p. 131
331:, p. 120
289:, p. 216
230:Uruguay
214:Germans
212:or the
202:British
125:fascism
67:anarchy
407:Rock,
394:Rock,
381:Rock,
368:Rock,
327:Rock,
197:Nazism
89:. The
40:French
210:Yanks
219:His
206:Jews
204:and
149:Liga
137:Liga
121:Liga
81:and
65:and
216:".
127:of
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336:^
307:^
236:.
77:,
50:.
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