Overview
- First publication in English to cover the topic comprehensively
- Compiles information to fill the gaps information left by written sources
- Represents contributions from several Latin American countries
Part of the book series: Contributions To Global Historical Archaeology (CGHA)
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Table of contents (10 chapters)
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Search for and Identification of Desaparecidos
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Clandestine detention centers
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Objects and Representations
Keywords
About this book
Reviews
Memories from Darkness, edited by Pedro Funari, Andres Zarankin, and Melisa Salerno shows us the kind of archaeology that really matters, in a particularly important way. It contains a real mixture of papers, covering different aspects of repression and dictatorship in a number of South Amiercan countries...There are theoretical papers, scientific pieces, material culture studies and first hand accounts on Brazil, Venezuela, Mexico, Bolivia, and Argentina, all adequately illustrated and, we must be thankful given the range of exciting South American scholarship presented here, with individual bibliographies for each paper. This book is about freedom of speech. None of the papers end with something as restrictive as a 'Conclusion'; rather those that choose end with 'Final Remarks'--a reminder of the importance of individuality and subjectivity when archaeology chooses to discuss matters of life and death.
Most of the book verges on shocking, but only in that minute scales to which the archaeologists here go in discussing the conditions and effects of repression are not commonly reported at the distance from which I write. Occasionally the contents of the book are downright hard...Memories from Darkness also has useful opinion pieces at its start (Laurent Oliver) and end (Martin Hall) that, rather than disrupting the distinctly South American collection of papers, serve to set them in useful wider contexts. Overall, this is an important publication. Its style feels quite 'raw', but this fits the subject matter and ethos of the book well. Required reading for contemporary and conflict archaeologists, it will also be of particular use to those among the wider world of post-medieval archaeology who are unsure as to the importance of studying the recent past and the present.
James Dixon
Post Medieval Archaeology
46/2, (2012)
Editors and Affiliations
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Memories from Darkness
Book Subtitle: Archaeology of Repression and Resistance in Latin America
Editors: Pedro Funari, Andres Zarankin, Melissa Salerno
Series Title: Contributions To Global Historical Archaeology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0679-3
Publisher: Springer New York, NY
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, Social Sciences (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer-Verlag New York 2010
Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4419-0678-6Published: 05 October 2009
Softcover ISBN: 978-1-4614-2460-4Published: 03 March 2012
eBook ISBN: 978-1-4419-0679-3Published: 23 September 2009
Series ISSN: 1574-0439
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XXVIII, 191
Number of Illustrations: 43 b/w illustrations
Topics: Archaeology, History, general, Political Science