The Politics of the Past in an Argentine Working-Class Neighbourhood The Politics of the Past in an Argentine Working-Class Neighbourhood

The Politics of the Past in an Argentine Working-Class Neighbourhood

    • $35.99
    • $35.99

Publisher Description

The Argentine dictatorship of 1976 to 1983 set out to transform Argentine society. Employing every means at its disposal - including rampant violation of human rights, union busting, and regressive economic policies - the dictatorship aimed to create its own kind of order. Lindsay DuBois's The Politics of the Past explores the lasting impact of this authoritarian transformative project for the people who lived through it.

DuBois's ethnography centres on José Ingenieros, a Buenos Aires neighbourhood founded in a massive squatter invasion in the early 1970s, and describes how the military government's actions largely subdued a politically engaged community. DuBois traces how state repression and community militancy are remembered in Joé Ingenieros and how the tangled and ambiguous legacies of the past continued to shape ordinary people's lives years after the collapse of the military regime.

This rich and evocative study breaks new ground in its exploration of the complex relationships between identity, memory, class formation, neoliberalism, and state violence.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2005
April 16
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
284
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
SELLER
University of Toronto Press
SIZE
7.7
MB

More Books Like This

Fighting Like a Community Fighting Like a Community
2009
Secrecy and Insurgency Secrecy and Insurgency
2014
The Right to Dignity The Right to Dignity
2022
In the Wake of Neoliberalism In the Wake of Neoliberalism
2012
Practicing Ethnography in a Globalizing World Practicing Ethnography in a Globalizing World
2006
Repression, Exile, and Democracy Repression, Exile, and Democracy
1992