Description

Book Synopsis
The election of Michelle Bachelet, the first female president of Chile, brought to the public sphere topics such as gender, inequality, and the legacy of seventeen years of military rule. Former dictator Augusto Pinochet instructed Chileans to for-get and move on, but this is complicated because individual and collective identities are anchored in memory and articulated through discourse. What happens to a nation and its people when the obliged referent of their recent history is one that hardly anyone wants to address? This book reveals the incongruity between what current media say about Chilean identity and what most people experience, showing the tensions that prevail within a society that is also quickly changing due to globalization. The author engages with the old dichotomy between agency and structure, proposing a new model for understanding identity from an intercultural perspective.

Trade Review
…A fabulous piece of work and a significant contribution to our understanding of how a society and a culture adjust, or do not, to the forces of history. The deep autobiographical element works brilliantly, with the author interweaving her own story with a powerful analytical inquiry into the nature of Chile in the post-Pinochet era, based also on extensive fieldwork and an analysis of several media outlets. For me, though, perhaps the most remarkable aspect is that despite the fact that she is not writing in her native Spanish, the book is beautifully written, enthralling, and at times deeply moving. -- Michael Tracey, University of Colorado at Boulder
The honesty with which the author shares the inner conversation that takes her back and forth from her native Chile to the United States will be fascinating for American audiences. Her journalistic background gives the book a vivid style one does not necessarily find in academic work, making it a splendid read for the general public. Bachelet’s presidency was a momentous period. With sound insight, the author does not shy away from the immediacy of the events, engaging the reader in a most compelling and up-to-date historical conversation. -- Liliana Trevizan, State University of New York at Potsdam

Table of Contents
Prologue: The Project’s Origin Acknowledgements Introduction: Notes on Methodology Chapter 1: Theorizing About Identity and Discourse Chapter 2: Identity, Memory, and the Shared Past Chapter 3: Tradition, Roles, and Women’s Identity Chapter 4: Class, Identity, and the 2010 Earthquake Chapter 5: National Identity in a Global World Epilogue: The Rise to Power of the Political Right Bibliography References to Chilean Media Articles Index

FORGET

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 17 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Claudia Bucciferro

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      View other formats and editions of FORGET by Claudia Bucciferro

      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 5/3/2012 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761858959, 978-0761858959
      ISBN10: 0761858954

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The election of Michelle Bachelet, the first female president of Chile, brought to the public sphere topics such as gender, inequality, and the legacy of seventeen years of military rule. Former dictator Augusto Pinochet instructed Chileans to for-get and move on, but this is complicated because individual and collective identities are anchored in memory and articulated through discourse. What happens to a nation and its people when the obliged referent of their recent history is one that hardly anyone wants to address? This book reveals the incongruity between what current media say about Chilean identity and what most people experience, showing the tensions that prevail within a society that is also quickly changing due to globalization. The author engages with the old dichotomy between agency and structure, proposing a new model for understanding identity from an intercultural perspective.

      Trade Review
      …A fabulous piece of work and a significant contribution to our understanding of how a society and a culture adjust, or do not, to the forces of history. The deep autobiographical element works brilliantly, with the author interweaving her own story with a powerful analytical inquiry into the nature of Chile in the post-Pinochet era, based also on extensive fieldwork and an analysis of several media outlets. For me, though, perhaps the most remarkable aspect is that despite the fact that she is not writing in her native Spanish, the book is beautifully written, enthralling, and at times deeply moving. -- Michael Tracey, University of Colorado at Boulder
      The honesty with which the author shares the inner conversation that takes her back and forth from her native Chile to the United States will be fascinating for American audiences. Her journalistic background gives the book a vivid style one does not necessarily find in academic work, making it a splendid read for the general public. Bachelet’s presidency was a momentous period. With sound insight, the author does not shy away from the immediacy of the events, engaging the reader in a most compelling and up-to-date historical conversation. -- Liliana Trevizan, State University of New York at Potsdam

      Table of Contents
      Prologue: The Project’s Origin Acknowledgements Introduction: Notes on Methodology Chapter 1: Theorizing About Identity and Discourse Chapter 2: Identity, Memory, and the Shared Past Chapter 3: Tradition, Roles, and Women’s Identity Chapter 4: Class, Identity, and the 2010 Earthquake Chapter 5: National Identity in a Global World Epilogue: The Rise to Power of the Political Right Bibliography References to Chilean Media Articles Index

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