José Javier Esparza Torres

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from José Javier Esparza)
Esparza in 2009

José Javier Esparza Torres (born 1963) is a Spanish journalist, essayist and cultural critic.

He was born in 1963 in Valencia.[1] He collaborated in Punto y Coma, a journal promoted by Jorge Verstrynge dedicated to the dissemination of Nouvelle Droite ideas in Spain along other authors such as Fernando Sánchez Dragó and Javier Sadaba.[2] Likewise, he also was a promoter of Hespérides, another journal linked to the Nouvelle Droite and Alain de Benoist (although Esparza avoided the pagan or antichristian facet of the movement),[3] and the so-called metapolitical Proyecto Cultural Aurora.[4] He also participated in La Razón Española, a francoist journal.[5]

On the onset of the 21st century, Esparza, coming from the radical right, devoted himself from his radio platform in the Cadena COPE to the laudation of "spanish feats" along history in a chronology already starting in Roman Hispania.[6] He has also written several essays of historical disclosure. His production relative to the Second Republic and the Civil War has been described as "junk" by Ricardo Robledo.[5]

He has worked for ABC, Ya and the Correo Group, joining Intereconomía in 2010.[7]

References[edit]

Citations
  1. ^ Costa 2018.
  2. ^ Rodríguez Jiménez 2012, p. 260.
  3. ^ González Cuevas 2001, p. 141.
  4. ^ Altemöller 2017, p. 263.
  5. ^ a b Robledo 2015.
  6. ^ Núñez Seixas 2018, p. 145.
  7. ^ "José Javier Esparza ficha por Intereconomía". FormulaTV. 6 September 2010.
Bibliography