State Repression and the Struggles for Memory |
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Page xvi
... policies and programs; police violence is ongoing, systematic, and reiterative; the most elementary of civil rights are threatened daily; and minorities face systematic institutional discrimination. All types of obstacles to a true ...
... policies and programs; police violence is ongoing, systematic, and reiterative; the most elementary of civil rights are threatened daily; and minorities face systematic institutional discrimination. All types of obstacles to a true ...
Page xvii
... policies of oblivion or “reconciliation.” Finally, there are those who visit the past to applaud and glorify the “order and prog- ress” brought about, in their view, by the dictatorships. All of these positions reflect ongoing struggles ...
... policies of oblivion or “reconciliation.” Finally, there are those who visit the past to applaud and glorify the “order and prog- ress” brought about, in their view, by the dictatorships. All of these positions reflect ongoing struggles ...
Page 18
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Page 33
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Page 35
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Contents
1 | |
2 What Memories Are We Talking About? | 8 |
3 Political Struggles for Memory | 26 |
4 History and Social Memory | 46 |
5 Trauma Testimony and Truth | 60 |
6 Engendered Memories | 76 |
7 Transmissions Legacies Lessons | 89 |
Conclusion | 103 |
A Chronology of Political Violence and Human Rights Movements | 107 |
Notes | 135 |
Works Cited | 149 |
Index | 157 |
Other editions - View all
State Repression and the Labors of Memory Elizabeth Jelin,Judy Rein,Marcial Godoy-Anativia No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
action active Alfredo Stroessner Alphen amnesty law Argentina armed forces Augusto Pinochet becomes Brazil Buenos Aires camps central Chile collective memory commemoration conflicts construction context convey cultural debate demands Desaparecidos detention dialogue dictatorship disappeared diverse elections experience expression forced disappearances forgetting frameworks future gender groups Halbwachs Henry Rousso Holocaust human rights movement human rights violations identity implies incorporate individual institutional interpretations involved issue Jelin Jorge Semprún kidnapping LaCapra linked listen lived March Maurice Halbwachs meanings memory entrepreneurs multiple narrate Nazi oblivion organization Paraguay past Pierre Nora Pinochet Plaza de Mayo political Pollak Portelli present president processes public sphere question regime relationship remember repetition repression Ricoeur Rigoberta Menchú role Rousso Semprún sense September Shoah silences Silva Catela social actors society Southern Cone spaces specific story Stroessner struggles survivors symbolic temporality tion tive torture traces transformation transition transmission traumatic truth Uruguay victims witness women