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E-raamat: Reframing the Transitional Justice Paradigm: Women's Affective Memories in Post-Dictatorial Argentina

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This volume explores the evolving and complex memorial consequences of state-sponsored violence in post-dictatorial Argentina. Specifically, it looks at the power and significance of personal emotions and affects in shaping memorial culture. This volume contends that we need to look beyond political and ideological contestations to a deeper level of how memorial cultures are formed and sustained. It argues that we cannot account for the politics of memory in modern-day Argentina without acknowledging and exploring the role played by individual emotions and affects in generating and shaping collective emotions and affects. Drawing from direct testimony from Argentinian women who have experienced political and physical violence, the research in this volume aims at understanding how their memories may be a different source of insight into the deep animosities within and between Argentine memorial cultures.





In direct contrast to the nominally objective and universalist sensibility that traditionally has driven transitional justice endeavours, this volume examines how affective memories of trauma are a potentially disruptive power within the reconciliation paradigmand thus affect should be taken into account when considering transitional justice. Accordingly, Cultures of Remembrance for Women in Post-Dictatorial Argentina is an excellent resource for those interested in human rights, transitional justice, clinical psychology and social work, and Latin American conflicts.
1 Introduction
1(16)
1.1 The Starting Point
1(7)
1.2 Politics of Memory in Argentina: Through an Affective Lens
8(3)
1.3 Ethics and Interviewing
11(6)
2 Argentina 1969-1999
17(22)
2.1 Period of Guerrilla Violence, 1969-1976
17(5)
2.2 Military Dictatorship, 1976-1983
22(5)
2.3 CONADEP and the Trials of the Military Juntas, 1983-1985
27(7)
2.4 Addressing the Legacy of Military Dictatorship and Guerrilla Violence, 1983-2003
34(5)
3 Politics of Remembering: The Military Dictatorship and Its Aftermath
39(20)
3.1 Disappearance and the Politics of Mourning and Melancholia
39(6)
3.2 The Politics of Identity
45(7)
3.3 Witnessing and Justice
52(7)
4 Politics of Remembering: Armed Guerrilla Violence
59(16)
4.1 Politics of Recognition
59(16)
5 Deep Memory
75(24)
5.1 Reliving Trauma
75(5)
5.2 How Deep Memory Works
80(1)
5.3 Living with Deep Memory
81(5)
5.4 The Durational Time of Deep Memory
86(2)
5.5 Discovering Deep Memory in the Testimonial Experience
88(2)
5.6 Living Long Term with Deep Memory
90(9)
6 Social Forces Shaping Memory Transmission
99(26)
6.1 Trauma and Group Identity
99(1)
6.2 Social Sharing of Emotions
100(5)
6.3 Transmission of Affects
105(2)
6.4 Affect and Perception
107(7)
6.5 Damaged Social Bonds
114(3)
6.6 Intergenerational Transmission of Affective Memory
117(8)
7 Haunting
125(24)
7.1 Legacies of Historical Violence
125(7)
7.2 Disappearance as Haunting
132(2)
7.3 Haunting Recognition
134(2)
7.4 Animating Photographs
136(3)
7.5 Life-Like Silhouettes
139(3)
7.6 Haunting Attachments
142(7)
8 Considering Affect in Transitional Contexts
149(8)
8.1 The Longevity of Deep Memory
149(2)
8.2 Affect and Empathy
151(4)
8.3 Affect and Vulnerability
155(2)
References 157(10)
Index 167
Jill Stockwell is a social researcher with expertise in the impact of conflict on individuals and societies. Her current research interests include memory studies, transitional justice studies, affect, trauma, testimony, and Latin American studies. She recently completed her PhD with the Institute of Social Research at the Swinburne University of Technology as part of the research team on the project, Social Memory and Historical Justice: How Democratic Societies Remember and Forget the Victimisation of Minorities in the Past.