The wars inside Chile's barracks: Remembering military service under Pinochet

Producción científica: Tipos de informe/libroLibrorevisión exhaustiva

17 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

From 1973 to 1990 in Chile, approximately 370,000 young men-mostly from impoverished backgrounds-were conscripted to serve as soldiers in Augusto Pinochet's violent regime. Some were brutal enforcers, but many themselves endured physical and psychological abuse, survival and torture training, arbitrary punishments, political persecution, and forced labor. Leith Passmore examines the emergence, in the early twenty-first century, of a movement of ex-conscripts seeking reparations. The former soldiers challenged the politics of memory that had shaped Chile's truth and reconciliation efforts, demanding recognition of their own broken families, ill health and incapacity to work, and damaged sense of self. Relying on unpublished material, testimony, interviews, and field notes, Passmore locates these individuals' narratives of victimhood at the intersection of long-term histories of patriotism, masculinity, and cyclical poverty. These accounts reveal in detail how Pinochet's war against his own citizens-as well as the "almost-wars" with neighboring Peru, Bolivia, and Argentina-were also waged inside Chile's army barracks.

Idioma originalInglés
EditorialUniversity of Wisconsin Press
Número de páginas279
ISBN (versión digital)9780299315238
ISBN (versión impresa)9780299315207
EstadoPublicada - 1 ene. 2017

Áreas temáticas de ASJC Scopus

  • Artes y Humanidades General

Huella

Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'The wars inside Chile's barracks: Remembering military service under Pinochet'. En conjunto forman una huella única.

Citar esto