Heritage from below in Latin America: Urban protests and the struggle for Human Rights

Badilla M.; Clark J.R.; Mason R.

Keywords: Latin America.; Urban heritage; coloniality; memory; resistance; social movements

Abstract

After the end of Latin American dictatorships, scholars closely analyzed the relationship between violence, memory and democracy. But these societies have continued to grapple not only with the legacy of authoritarian governments but with centuries of colonial power, with the result that many of the assumptions of earlier scholars are now being revisited. Intersectional questions of race, indigeneity and gender continue to refashion our under-standing of memory and injustice. These questions frame this introductory article, in which we argue that Latin American contemporary social mobilisation that has denounced recent and long-term violence is constituted through intervention and creation of heritage from below. We propose that the interdisciplinary field of Critical Heritage Studies, that has bur-geoned recently in the region, offers a means to understand how space, scale, and society interact to create meanings and work through violent pasts. The works of this Special Col-lection extend traditional conceptions of urban heritage as the mere conservation of cities' landscape, towards the study of the relation between cultural geographies and the production of social mobilizations in Latin America. These geographies enable unique formulations of protest for activists, creating new capacities to contest recent and long-term human rights abuse.

Más información

Título de la Revista: European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Número: 113
Editorial: Centre for Latin American Research and Documentation/Centro de Estudios y Documentación Latinoamericanos (CEDLA)
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página final: 102
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.32992/erlacs.10923