Mass Atrocity, Collective Memory, and the Law
Combining a concrete sense of present urgency and a theoretical understanding of social, political, and historical realities, State Repression and the Labors of Memory fashions tools for thinking about and analyzing the presences, silences, and meanings of the past. With unflappable good judgment and fairness, Elizabeth Jelin clarifies the often muddled debates about the nature of memory, the politics of struggles over memories of historical injustice, the relation of historiography to memory, the issue of truth in testimony and traumatic remembrance, the role of women in Latin American attempts to cope with the legacies of military dictatorships, and problems of second-generation memory and its transmission and appropriation.
Jelin's work engages European and North American theory in its exploration of the various ways in which conflicts over memory shape individual and collective identities, as well as social and political cleavages. In doing so, her book exposes the enduring consequences of repression for social processes in Latin America, and at the same time enriches our general understanding of the fundamentally conflicted and contingent nature of memory.
Elizabeth Jelin is senior researcher for the National Council of Scientific Research, Argentina, and academic director of the Center for the Study of Memory in Buenos Aires.
Country | USA |
Brand | University of Minnesota Press |
Manufacturer | Univ Of Minnesota Press |
Binding | Paperback |
ReleaseDate | 2003-12-10 |
UnitCount | 1 |
EANs | 9780816642847 |