El libro de Steve J. Stern relata elegantemente la conflictiva historia reciente de Chile. El autor ha encontrado una hábil solución al espinoso problema de la imparcialidad a la hora de retratar puntos de vista tan divergentes que desafían incluso el más cuidadoso de los intentos por retratar los hechos del periodo de Pinochet.
Steve J. Stern is the Alberto Flores Galindo Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He is the author of books including Reckoning with Pinochet: The Memory Question in Democratic Chile, 1989-2006, Battling for Hearts and Minds: Memory Struggles in Pinochet’s Chile, 1973–1988, winner of the Bolton-Johnson Prize (the Conference on Latin American History), and Remembering Pinochet’s Chile: On the Eve of London 1998.
The great part of this book are the individual stories - both of those who suffered and lost under Pinochet, and those who saw Pinochet as a savior. (Even though you really want to smack those who fall into the latter category.) But the few stories presented weren't enough to carry the book. So just to push it over 150 pages Stern gets quite repetitive and predictable in his discussions of memory and the different types of memory. Would've been better with more oral history and less attempted theory.
Fantastic work of oral history and theoretical grappling with memory. Stern only interviews really particular characters in this episode of Chile's history, and I'd recommend familiarizing yourself with modern Chilean history before diving into this book. This is an incredibly important contribution to the understanding of how memory forms and works in moments of political turmoil and trauma, leftists of all kinds would benefit greatly from understanding how violence works in shaping experience and perspective. The theoretical chapter on memory (Ch. 4) was a bit repetitive and dense at times, but I foresee myself returning to it again for future endeavors. I look forward to reading his other books.
Y'all this was great. Steve J. Stern looks at Chilean memory of General Pinochets successful coup on Sept. 11, 1973 and the political violence that was used to suppress perceived enemies. I think we tend to assume that bc it was so violent that the obvious memory should be "wow that was terrible." But as Stern writes, memory is very contentious. He introduces us to actual people and how they remembered what happened. Some saw the coup as the country's salvation, some saw it as a rupture, others are haunted by the persecution they endured, and some are indifferent bc opening the memory box means confronting very harsh and violent realities. The ending is very theory heavy so be aware.
If you are interested in all in the study of memory (collective, historical, emblematic, or otherwise) or of the Cold War in Latin America, this book is for you. This is a riveting account of memory and reckoning in the aftermath of Pinochet's Chile. It's an easy and fantastic read.
I'm still shaken from just having finished the book. It was assigned for a class, but I'm glad I read it. It helps make sense of different "emblematic memories" (frameworks and archetypes of memories) not just of the dictatorship and repression in Chile, but universally, from memories/memorials of the Holocaust to individuals' personal familial traumas and crises. Would recommend.
I'm sort of caught between 3 and 4 stars because it was very interesing, informative and insightful, but it could get really repetitive. The concluding chapter, for example, could have been half as long. In fact, the repetitiveness sometimes made my mind wander, so I would miss new concepts hidden in a page and a half of review, and have to re-read.
Very good assessment of personal tales from the Pinochet era, however, I am unsure if I like or agree with the metaphor of a "memory box." Nonetheless, this was a very interesting read and those that are interested in human rights, historical memory, or politics in Latin America should give this one a go.
Great book that looks at the aftermath of Pinochet's Chile. This book contains knowledge from victims of the regime, the perpetrators, and the bystanders. It really showed how memory and history can be manipulated and controlled. It breaks my heart to know what happened to people down in Chile, they should not die alone in the dark. We must remember them, least we forget. This was a class text.
A good finding on the study of memory, different memories of different background people who oversaw the rise of General Pinochet to Power in September 11, 1973.