Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963

<p>This thesis seeks to recover historical memory during El Salvador&rsquo;s devastating anticommunist campaigns from 1932 to 1963. With El Salvador&rsquo;s long history of repression against social movements, fear and even shame have silenced stories about the movement and its partici...

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Main Author: Portillo, Claudia Annette
Language:EN
Published: California State University, Los Angeles 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141186
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101411862016-07-28T16:03:06Z Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963 Portillo, Claudia Annette Latin American history|Latin American studies <p>This thesis seeks to recover historical memory during El Salvador&rsquo;s devastating anticommunist campaigns from 1932 to 1963. With El Salvador&rsquo;s long history of repression against social movements, fear and even shame have silenced stories about the movement and its participants. In line with the current projects dedicated to social memory, this projects reconstructs the untold story of Felix Paname&ntilde;o, a local shoemaker and member of the Communist Party in the 1930s through his family&rsquo;s memories. Shoemakers were key to the growing political consciousness of the time, as documented by Roque Dalton through the testimonial of shoemaker and survivor of the 1932 revolt, <i>Miguel M&aacute;rmol</i>. Much of Paname&ntilde;o&rsquo;s life and struggle transpired within key political moments from the persecutions of political activists that followed the 1932 revolt, known as &ldquo;<i> La Matanza</i>&rdquo;, through the wave of repressive military dictatorships that conspired against political activist and democracy. These dictators imposed a tyranny that ultimately drove large numbers of Salvadorans to migrate to the U.S. beginning in the 1960s. Many of these immigrants, in turn, silenced their memories and depoliticized in exchange for a new beginning. Today, some of these memories are being rebuilt, giving insight to better understanding El Salvador&rsquo;s past, as well as the present peoples&rsquo; struggle for democracy at home and those participating from abroad. </p> California State University, Los Angeles 2016-07-26 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141186 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Latin American history|Latin American studies
spellingShingle Latin American history|Latin American studies
Portillo, Claudia Annette
Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
description <p>This thesis seeks to recover historical memory during El Salvador&rsquo;s devastating anticommunist campaigns from 1932 to 1963. With El Salvador&rsquo;s long history of repression against social movements, fear and even shame have silenced stories about the movement and its participants. In line with the current projects dedicated to social memory, this projects reconstructs the untold story of Felix Paname&ntilde;o, a local shoemaker and member of the Communist Party in the 1930s through his family&rsquo;s memories. Shoemakers were key to the growing political consciousness of the time, as documented by Roque Dalton through the testimonial of shoemaker and survivor of the 1932 revolt, <i>Miguel M&aacute;rmol</i>. Much of Paname&ntilde;o&rsquo;s life and struggle transpired within key political moments from the persecutions of political activists that followed the 1932 revolt, known as &ldquo;<i> La Matanza</i>&rdquo;, through the wave of repressive military dictatorships that conspired against political activist and democracy. These dictators imposed a tyranny that ultimately drove large numbers of Salvadorans to migrate to the U.S. beginning in the 1960s. Many of these immigrants, in turn, silenced their memories and depoliticized in exchange for a new beginning. Today, some of these memories are being rebuilt, giving insight to better understanding El Salvador&rsquo;s past, as well as the present peoples&rsquo; struggle for democracy at home and those participating from abroad. </p>
author Portillo, Claudia Annette
author_facet Portillo, Claudia Annette
author_sort Portillo, Claudia Annette
title Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
title_short Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
title_full Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
title_fullStr Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
title_full_unstemmed Silencing memories| The Workers' Movement for Democracy in El Salvador, 1932--1963
title_sort silencing memories| the workers' movement for democracy in el salvador, 1932--1963
publisher California State University, Los Angeles
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141186
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