| Red City, Blue Period |
| Acknowledgments |
| Introduction— The Symbolic Landscape |
| • | Urban Landscape |
| • | Texture of the City |
| • | The Shape of Cultural Politics |
| 1— Resistance and Ritual, 1888–1896 |
| • | The Virgin of Mercy |
| • | Republican Rituals |
| • | The Creation of Leftist Traditions |
| • | The Virgin of Mercy Bombing |
| • | The Corpus Christi Bombing |
| • | Conclusion |
| 2— Popular Art and Rituals |
| • | Santiago Russinyol |
| • | The Four Cats Café |
| • | Hand Puppets |
| • | Puppets and Culture |
| • | Miracle Paintings |
| • | Conclusion |
| 3— Community Celebrations and Communal Strikes, 1902 |
| • | The 1902 General Strike |
| • | The Festival of the Virgin of Mercy |
| • | Pablo Picasso |
| • | Conclusion |
| 4— Women Out of Control |
| • | Bombing the Rambla of Flowers |
| • | Prostitutes and Barcelona's Working-Class Community |
| • | Tragic Week |
| • | Nuns, Prostitutes, and Rebellion |
| 5— Female Consciousness and Community Struggle, 1910–1918 |
| • | Collective Action: Barcelona, 1910 |
| • | The Birth of the CNT |
| • | Collective Action: Barcelona, 1913 |
| • | Collective Action: Barcelona, 1918 |
| • | Conclusion |
| 6— Democratic Promises in 1917 |
| • | The Impact of the First World War |
| • | Picasso in Barcelona |
| • | Revolutionary Upsurge |
| • | Three Possible Revolutions That Failed |
| • | Picasso's Response to the 1917 General Strike |
| • | Conclusion |
| 7— Urban Disorder and Cultural Resistance, 1919—1930 |
| • | The 1919 General Strike |
| • | The Death of Seguí |
| • | New Trends in Catalan Nationalism |
| • | Resistance to the Dictatorship |
| • | Conclusion |
| 8— Cultural Reactions to the Spanish Republic and the Civil War in Barcelona |
| • | Cultural Resurgence |
| • | Growing Political Turmoil |
| • | Popular Culture and Artistic Resistance |
| • | The Bombing of Guernica and the Civil War in Barcelona |
| • | Barcelona's May Days and the Making of Guernica |
| Epilogue— Cultural Resistance in the Aftermath |
| Appendix |
| Notes |
| • | Introduction— The Symbolic Landscape |
| • | 1— Resistance and Ritual, 1888–1896 |
| • | 2— Popular Art and Rituals |
| • | 3— Community Celebrations and Communal Strikes, 1902 |
| • | 4— Women Out of Control |
| • | 5— Female Consciousness and Community Struggle, 1910–1918 |
| • | 6— Democratic Promises in 1917 |
| • | 7— Urban Disorder and Cultural Resistance, 1919—1930 |
| • | 8— Cultural Reactions to the Spanish Republic and the Civil War in Barcelona |
| • | Epilogue— Cultural Resistance in the Aftermath |
| Bibliography |
| Primary Sources |
| • | Archives |
| • | Newspapers and Periodicals |
| • | Books and Articles |
| Secondary Sources |
| • | General |
| • | Picasso Studies |
| Index |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | X |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |