The apolitics of memory: Remembering military service under Pinochet through and alongside transitional justice, truth, and reconciliation
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
2016Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Passmore, Leith
Cómo citar
The apolitics of memory: Remembering military service under Pinochet through and alongside transitional justice, truth, and reconciliation
Author
Abstract
Approximately 370,000 young men served as conscripted soldiers during the Pinochet dictatorship. Recruits
were at times complicit in, witnesses to, or victims of human rights abuses committed under military rule.
Memory of conscription for a long time was hidden behind silence maintained by fear, confusion, shame, anger,
alcohol, and drugs. In the mid 2000s, however, ex-conscripts began to gather into groups that functioned
first as support networks, and later as advocacy organizations pushing for recognition as victims and for
reparations. By 2013, nearly 100,000 former recruits had mobilized. This article historicizes the conscript
memory narrative of victimhood that emerged with the ex-conscript movement of the early twenty-first
century. It examines the relationship between ex-conscripts’ memory of military rule, transitional justice,
and the state-led truth and reconciliation process. Chile’s “politics of memory” provided catalysts and cues
for ex-conscript memory, but neither of the competing shared memory frameworks have been unable to
accommodate the former recruits’ sense of victimhood. Ex-conscript memory is not bound by a common
political identity or interpretation of the 1973 coup or the 17 years of military rule. The “apolitics of
memory” have instead ensured that ex-conscripts remember military service under Pinochet not within but
rather alongside the country’s politicized memoryscape.
General note
Artículos de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Chilean Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT)
3120033
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/139323
DOI: DOI: 10.1177/1750698015587152
ISSN: 1750-6980
Quote Item
Memory Studies 2016, Vol. 9 (2) 173– 186
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: