RIP: Ronald Fraser, People's Historian
Ronald Fraser, one of the preeminent historians of the Spanish Civil War, has died at the age of 81:
Ronald Fraser, an English oral historian known for his deftness at collecting and presenting ordinary people’s experiences during momentous events like the Spanish Civil War, died on Feb. 10 in Valencia, Spain. He was 81.
Tariq Ali, a friend and colleague, announced the death. He gave no cause.
Mr. Fraser used transcriptions of interviews, the oral historian’s principal tool, to write books chronicling working-class life, the ways of a Spanish village, the 1968 student uprisings in the United States and Europe, and even his own life.
His most influential book was “Blood of Spain: An Oral History of the Spanish Civil War,” a 628-page work published in 1979 that Paul Preston, a historian of the Spanish Civil War, said in The New York Times Book Review would “take its place among the dozen or so truly important books about the Spanish conflict.”
Time magazine said, “No other volume on the Spanish Civil War can surpass the power and detail of this one.” [NYT]
Fraser’s friend Tariq Ali remembers him in The Guardian.