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Disruptive Archives

Feminist Memories of Resistance in Latin America's Dirty Wars
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The histories of the Dirty Wars in Mexico and Argentina (1960sGÇô1980s) have largely erased how women experienced and remember the gendered violence during this traumatic time. Viviana Beatriz MacManus restores women to the revolutionary struggle at the heart of the era by rejecting both state projects and the leftist accounts focused on men. Using a compelling archival blend of oral histories, interviews, human rights reports, literature, and film, MacManus illuminates complex narratives of loss, violence, and trauma. The accounts upend dominant histories by creating a feminist-centered body of knowledge that challenges the twinned legacies of oblivion for the victims and state-sanctioned immunity for the perpetrators. A new Latin American feminist theory of justice emerges'one that acknowledges women's strength, resistance, and survival during and after a horrific time in their nations' histories.

Haunting and methodologically innovative, Disruptive Archives attests to the power of women's storytelling and memory in the struggle to reclaim history.

Acknowledgments
Introduction. “All of Latin America Is Sown with the Bones of [its] Forgotten Youtha: Hemispheric State Terror and Latin American Feminist Theories of Justice
Chapter One. Critical Latin American Feminist Perspectives and the Limits and Possibilities of Human Rights Reports
Chapter Two. Sexual Necropolitics, Survival, and the Gender of Betrayal
Chapter Three. “Ghosts of Another Eraa: Gendered Haunting and the Legacy of Women's Armed Resistance
Chapter Four. Gendered Memories, Collective Subjectivity, and Solidarity Practices in Women's Oral Histories
Epilogue. The Legacy of State-Sanctioned Violence and Specters of the Dirty War's Radical Women
Notes
Bibliography
Index
""MacManus offers a deft contribution to the study of Latin American political repression by keeping women's participation in resistance struggles at the center of her feminist intertextual analyses of oral histories and literary and audiovisual pieces.""--Pascha Bueno-Hansen, author of Feminist and Human Rights Struggles in Peru: Decolonizing Transitional Justice
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