“To Live with Honor, or Die”: The Metamorphosis of Place, National Symbols, Masculinities, and Practices under State Terrorism (1973-1990)
This article explores the value of urban history and material culture in the study of memory. More specifically, it offers an examination through a masculine lens of the ways in which urban icons have impacted and shaped individual and national identities. The article focuses on Bulnes Square in San...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of urban history 2024-03, Vol.50 (2), p.402-421 |
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description | This article explores the value of urban history and material culture in the study of memory. More specifically, it offers an examination through a masculine lens of the ways in which urban icons have impacted and shaped individual and national identities. The article focuses on Bulnes Square in Santiago de Chile and the Eternal Flame of Liberty as a key place and symbol of Augusto Pinochet’s “fascism in progress.” I draw on local press archives, advertising, and photographs to further explore the gender metaphor of state and nation as expressions of monolithic nationalism and their perpetuation of a hypermasculine tone, examining their links to place and national memory construction. |
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source | Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List |
subjects | 20th century Advertising Collective memory Fascism Local media Masculinity Material culture National identity National symbols Nationalism Perpetuation Photography Symbols Terrorism Urban areas Urban history |
title | “To Live with Honor, or Die”: The Metamorphosis of Place, National Symbols, Masculinities, and Practices under State Terrorism (1973-1990) |
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