The dramatic story of Chile's coal miners in the mid-twentieth
century has never before been told. In Mining for the Nation, Jody
Pavilack shows how this significant working-class sector became a
stronghold of support for the Communist Party as it embraced
cross-class alliances aimed at defeating fascism, promoting
national development, and deepening Chilean democracy. During the
tumultuous 1930s and 1940s, the coal miners emerged as a powerful
social and political base that came to be seen as a threat to
existing hierarchies and interests. Pavilack carries the story
through the end of World War II, when a centrist president elected
with crucial Communist backing brutally repressed the coal miners
and their families in what has become known as the Great Betrayal,
ushering Cold War politics into Chile with force. The patriotic
fervor and tragic outcome of the coal miners' participation in
Popular Front coalition politics left an important legacy for those
who would continue the battle for greater social justice in Chile
in the coming decades.
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