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Latin American Perspectives
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Popular Power, Oral History, and Collective Memory in Contemporary Chile

Franck Gaudichaud

Chile’s collective memory has been brutalized by state-implemented terrorism. This historical process has resulted in, among other things, a "torn collective memory." The history and memory of the period of so-called popular power (1970—1973) continue to be largely unknown. Oral history allows us to begin a slow process of historical reconstruction as well as to reflect on the construction of militant memories.

Key Words: Chile • Unidad Popular • Pinochet dictatorship • Collective memory • Oral history

Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 36, No. 5, 58-71 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0094582X09341976


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