Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Jan 2001

The Chilean Student Movement: Challenging Public Memories of Pinochet's DICTATORSHIP*

Page Range: 493 – 510
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-24-4-493
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This article illustrates the connection between the rise of social movements and the profound transformations in the ways post-conflict societies symbolize their difficult past. It examines how the 2011 Chilean student movement developed an alternative memory about Chile's Pinochet regime. I show how the movement claimed fundamental changes within the educational and political systems, framing its demands as a critical response to the socioeconomic neoliberal transformations set in motion by the Pinochet military regime. Through an empirical analysis of the 2011 student movement that combines 60 in-depth interviews with young activists with archival research, this article demonstrates how an alternative version of the dictatorial past was closely linked to the movement's goals and affected internal dynamics of belonging. The results indicate that participants managed to go beyond traumatic narratives concerning human rights crimes that had been dominant in the Chilean public memory about the dictatorship. Therefore, they presented a change that constituted a major challenge to the future of the politics of memory in Chile.

Copyright: © 2019 Mobilization: An International Quarterly 2019

Contributor Notes

* I am grateful to Robin Wagner-Pacifici, Katherine Hite, and Daniela Jara for reading and commenting on previous versions of this article. This work has benefited from the stimulating discussion at the Latin American Studies Association Conference in 2018. Thank you also to the two reviewers and the editors of this special issue for their meticulous and constructive suggestions and ideas. Special thanks go to all my interviewees without whom this analysis would not have been possible.

Postdoctoral research fellow at the Project “Political Culture and Post-dictatorship: Memories of the Past, Struggles of the Present and Challenges of the Future” (Proyecto Anillo PIA CONICTY SOC 180007), Faculty of Social Sciences University of Valparaíso; and Junior Fellow at Núcleo Milenio Arte, Performatividad y Activismo.

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