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dictatorship
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 67–76.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Heidi Tinsman This essay looks at rising conflicts between women and men that accompanied Chile's tumultuous and extensive agrarian reform between 1964 and 1973. It goes on to examine rural women's proletarianization as fruit workers under military dictatorship. The essay argues that during...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2007) 2007 (97): 123–133.
Published: 01 January 2007
...Felipe Agüero MARHO: The Radical Historians' Organization, Inc. 2007 TEACHING RADICAL HISTORY
Dictatorship and Human Rights:
The Politics of Memory
Felipe Agüero
I taught this course only once, in the fall of 2003. A course on the politics of memory
was, for me, definitely...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (138): 82–107.
Published: 01 October 2020
... 24, 1976, the Argentine military staged a coup d’état and established a dictatorship, perpetrating mass civilian murder until democratic transition in 1983. Drawing on state intelligence archive surveillance documents, the artist-activist intervention Campaña DESAPARECER, and travesti and transgender...
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Image
in “No State Apparatus Goes to Bed Genocidal Then Wakes Up Democratic”: Fascist Ideology and Transgender Politics in Post-dictatorship Argentina
> Radical History Review
Published: 01 October 2020
Figure 1. The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo’s final march under dictatorship in the Plaza de Mayo on December 8, 1983. Photograph by Mónica Hasenberg-Brennan Quaretti. Image courtesy of the Hasenberg-Quaretti archive.
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 11–41.
Published: 01 January 2016
... for selected crimes defined in the Code of Military Justice. © 2016 by MARHO: The Radical Historians' Organization, Inc. 2016 Chilean politics military dictatorship Chilean democracy Chile civil liberties The Political Architecture of Dictatorship
Chile before September 11, 1973
Brian...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 153–164.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Elizabeth Lira Forty years after the coup of 1973, the death of President Salvador Allende Gossens, and the beginning of a seventeen-year period (1973–90) of human rights violations by the military dictatorship, it is time to turn attention from a Santiago-centric history and relate the regional...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 141–152.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Michael J. Lazzara Civilian complicity remains one of the least studied aspects of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship and, to this point, has not been a matter of widespread public debate in Chile. This article examines the case of Mariana Callejas, a literary writer who married the American-born DINA...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 177–191.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Alicia del Campo The 2011 student movement radically challenged the Chilean political process by exposing the hidden legacy of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship and demanding a complete restructuring of its neoliberal reforms. The demonstrators contended that these so-called reforms transformed...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (125): 35–54.
Published: 01 May 2016
... as they related to three aspects of recreational football culture—men's workplace teams, women's football, and fan clubs—it argues that the sport, like few other leisure pursuits, illustrates the complex relationship between politics and pleasure in a one-party dictatorship. Football was an unusually visible...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 117–128.
Published: 01 January 2016
... as a mobilizing language that symbolized the drive for truth, justice, and democracy? This essay traces, for the iconic case of Chile, the dialectics of street struggle and cognitive struggle during the Pinochet dictatorship of the 1970s and 1980s that turned memory into a strategic language for victim-survivors...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 129–140.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Cath Collins This essay discusses the origins, implications, and future of present-day trials for dictatorship-era human rights violations in Chile. It analyzes the causes, consequences, and likely future of these prosecutions and debates how use of the judicial idiom may have both negatively...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2023) 2023 (146): 84–104.
Published: 01 May 2023
... dictatorship. Instead, this article rethinks the chronology and nature of state violence in Argentina, examining how the situation of political prisoners in regular prisons officially recognized by the state was already deteriorating in 1960s, even under civilian regimes. The military achieved increasing...
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2023) 2023 (146): 167–177.
Published: 01 May 2023
... prisoners of the 1966–73 dictatorship were released by the democratic president Héctor Cámpora on the day he took office. This event, which occurred on May 25, 1973, is known as the Devotazo. Sanguinetti took these photographs—a roll of thirty-six black-and-white images—with a camera that her brother...
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (136): 129–141.
Published: 01 January 2020
... accused of committing human rights abuses during the Fulgencio Batista dictatorship. This essay argues that Operation Truth prompted a battle of information waged to define the legitimacy of emotion and calculation as a way of supporting political action in Cuba. Operation Truth coverage judged...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (136): 142–155.
Published: 01 January 2020
..., a commitment to continent-wide revolution, and a vision of a better world. Through festivals, gatherings, and conferences, mass concerts and radio, international travel, and, under dictatorship, clandestinely circulated cassette tapes, the Nueva Canción exemplified a generation’s search for multiple meanings...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (138): 11–38.
Published: 01 October 2020
..., and considers to what extent this tradition is still relevant today. In particular, this article focuses on the movements of solidarity with the Vietnamese and Palestinian national liberation struggles and against the Greek and Chilean dictatorships. At various moments in time and depending on the particular...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (137): 193–198.
Published: 01 May 2020
...Samuel Fury Childs Daly Abstract Nigeria’s police forces are famously ineffective and unpopular. Police agencies carry the dual stigma of having colonial origins and close connections to the military dictatorships that ruled Nigeria in its first forty years of independence. Despite their poor...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2003) 2003 (85): 272–281.
Published: 01 January 2003
..., with support from the
U.S. government, brought down the democratically elected socialist Unidad Popu-
lar (Popular Unity, UP) government of Salvador Allende (1970–73) and initiated one
of Latin America’s longest and bloodiest dictatorships. In another...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2016) 2016 (124): 1–9.
Published: 01 January 2016
...
through a liberal democratic process, and it ushered in seventeen years of a bloody
military dictatorship under General Augusto Pinochet, a regime that became iconic
of authoritarian rule and human rights violations throughout Latin America in the
1970s and 1980s. During military rule, and enabled...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 123–139.
Published: 01 January 2001
... mausoleums
in the aristocratic section of the municipal cemetery, is a description of the “memo-
rial that has been erected to those who were executed and ‘disappeared’ during
General Pinochet’s dictatorship. On a slab of white stone about three stories tall, sev...
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