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Memory’s Turn: Reckoning with Dictatorship in Brazil: Critical Human Rights

Autor Rebecca J. Atencio
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iun 2014
After twenty-one years of military dictatorship, Brazil returned to democratic rule in 1985. Yet over the following two decades, the country largely ignored human rights crimes committed by state security agents, crimes that included the torture, murder, and disappearance of those who opposed the authoritarian regime.
            In clear and engaging prose, Rebecca J. Atencio tells the story of the slow turn to memory in Brazil, a turn that has taken place in both politics and in cultural production. She shows how testimonial literature, telenovelas, literary novels, theatrical plays, and memorials have interacted with policies adopted by the Brazilian state, often in unexpected ways. Under the right circumstances, official and cultural forms of reckoning combine in Brazil to produce what Atencio calls cycles of cultural memory. Novel meanings of the past are forged, and new cultural works are inspired, thus creating the possibility for further turns in the cycle.
            The first book to analyze Brazil’s reckoning with dictatorship through both institutional and cultural means, Memory’s Turn is a rich, informative exploration of the interplay between these different modes of memory reconstruction.

Winner, Alfred B. Thomas Award, Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies

Honorable Mention, Roberto Reis Book Prize, Brazilian Studies Association
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299297244
ISBN-10: 0299297241
Pagini: 190
Ilustrații: 9 b-w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press
Seria Critical Human Rights


Recenzii

“An extremely well-written, engaging, and interesting contribution to the scholarship on postdictatorial memory construction in Latin America. Atencio allows readers to see the multiple and layered ways in which postconflict societies construct and contest the meanings of the past.”—Michael J. Lazzara, author of Chile in Transition

“A major book that takes the field of human rights in a new direction. Atencio enables us to see a powerful dialectic of culture and institutions and its relevance for understanding human rights.”—Steve J. Stern, series editor

“Atencio’s revelation of cultural and political synergies highlights the ambiguities inherent in recovering truths from the past, for memory and truth are not always the same thing.”—Choice

"In very moving and elegant prose, Atencio demonstrates how oral testimonies, telenovelas, and theatrical plays allowed the memory of the dictatorship to remain present in the country’s politics and the everyday life of ordinary Brazilians, even in the midst of an official silence about the past."—Latin American Research Review

Notă biografică

Rebecca J. Atencio is an assistant professor of Brazilian literary and cultural studies at Tulane University. Founder of the blog Transitional Justice in Brazil, she lives in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations                            
Acknowledgments                             
List of Abbreviations                         
 
Introduction: The Turn to Memory in Brazilian Culture and Politics                                  
1 Testimonies and the Amnesty Law                        
2 A Prime-Time Miniseries and Impeachment                                  
3 Literary and Official Truth-Telling                         
4 From Torture Center to Stage and Site of Memory                                   
Conclusion: Memory's Turns and Returns                           
 
Notes                         
Bibliography                          
Index

Descriere

The first book to trace Brazil’s reckoning with dictatorship through the collision of politics and cultural production.