On September 11, 1973, Chile's General Pinochet led a quick and
brutal military coup ousting the Allende government. Ignacio
Lopez-Calvo argues that the rise of the Pinochet dictatorship and
the subsequent imprisonment of any Allende sympathizers shaped
Chilean narrative into two structural forms: liberationist
narrative--cathartic, journalistic testimonies that provide models
for revolutionary behavior against authoritarianism and
demystifying narrative, which uses the events of 1973, as well as
the colonial aspirations of European countries, as a "Paradise
Lost" backdrop in which the characters of this type of fiction are
able to create their non-political realities that become models of
democratization.
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