Salt in the Sand: Memory, Violence, and the Nation-State in Chile, 1890 to the Present

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Duke University Press, 2007 M07 17 - 388 páginas
Salt in the Sand is a compelling historical ethnography of the interplay between memory and state violence in the formation of the Chilean nation-state. The historian and anthropologist Lessie Jo Frazier focuses on northern Chile, which figures prominently in the nation’s history as a site of military glory during the period of national conquest, of labor strikes and massacres in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth, and of state detention and violence during World War II and the Cold War. It was also the site of a mass-grave excavation that galvanized the national human rights movement in 1990, during Chile’s transition from dictatorship to democracy. Frazier analyzes the creation of official and alternative memories of specific instances of state violence in northern Chile from 1890 to the present, tracing how the form and content of those memories changed over time. In so doing, she shows how memory works to create political subjectivities mobilized for specific political projects within what she argues is the always-ongoing process of nation-state formation. Frazier’s broad historical perspective on political culture challenges the conventional periodization of modern Chilean history, particularly the idea that the 1973 military coup marked a radical break with the past.

Analyzing multiple memories of state violence, Frazier innovatively shapes social and cultural theory to interpret a range of sources, including local and national government archives, personal papers, popular literature and music, interviews, architectural and ceremonial commemorations, and her ethnographic observations of civic associations, women's and environmental groups, and human rights organizations. A masterful integration of extensive empirical research with sophisticated theoretical analysis, Salt in the Sand is a significant contribution to interdisciplinary scholarship on human rights, democratization, state formation, and national trauma and reconciliation.

 

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Contenido

Memory and the Camanckacas Calientes of Chilean NationState Formation
21
Structures of Memory Shapes of FeelingChronology of Reminiscence and repression in Tarapaca I 890PRESENT
58
Dismantling MemoryStructuring the forgetting of the oficina Ranidez 18901891and La Coruna 1925Massacres
85
Song of the Tragic Pampa Structuring the remembering of the Escuela Santa Maria Massacre 1907
117
Conjunctures of Memory The Detention Camps in Pesgua Remembered 194819731990and forgotten194319561984
158
The Melancholic Economy of Reconciliation Taking with the Dead Mourning for Living
190
Democratization and arriving at the End of History in Chile
243
Notes
261
Selective Bibliography
355
Index
365

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Lessie Jo Frazier is Assistant Professor of Gender Studies and Adjunct Assistant Professor of History at Indiana University, Bloomington. She is a coeditor of Gender’s Place: Feminist Anthropologies of Latin America.

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