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Issues of migration and identity are a constant in today’s globalized world, particularly for developed nations that have become attractive destinations due to their economic and political stability for those crossing borders. Unlike Canada, Spain is not a country with a modern tradition of immigration, having been an emigrant nation under the Francisco Franco dictatorship (1939-1975) and seeing a significant reverse in that dynamic only as recently as the 2000s. Indeed, in less than twenty years Spain’s foreign-born population has gone from negligible to twelve percent, prompting questions of what “Spanishness” means for such an increasingly transnational population. Memory is …