Written as a book for undergraduate students as well as
scholars, Surviving Dictatorship is a work of visual sociology and
oral history, and a case study that communicates the lived
experience of poverty, repression, and resistance in an
authoritarian society: Pinochet s Chile.
It focuses on shantytown women, examining how they join groups
to cope with exacerbated impoverishment and targeted repression,
and how this leads them into very varied forms of resistance aimed
at self-protection, community-building, and mounting an offensive.
Drawing on a visual database of shantytown photographs, art,
posters, flyers, and bulletins, as well as on interviews, photo
elicitation, and archival research, the book is an example of how
multiple methods might be successfully employed to examine
dictatorship from the perspective of some of the least powerful
members of society. It is ideal for courses in social inequalities,
poverty, race/class/gender, political sociology, global studies,
urban studies, women s studies, human rights, oral history, and
qualitative methods.
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