The Bastille Effect :

transforming sites of political imprisonment /
Michael Welch.
Bibliographic Details
Main Creator: Welch, Michael, 1960- author.
Summary:"As conceptualized throughout this richly illustrated book, the Bastille Effect represents the unique ways that former prisons and detention centers are transformed, both physically and culturally. In their afterlives, these sites deliver critiques of political imprisonment and the sustained efforts to hold perpetrators accountable for state violence. However, for that narrative to surface, the sites are cleansed of their profane past, and in some cases clergy are even enlisted to perform purifying rituals that grant the sites a new place identity as memorials. For example, at Villa Grimaldi, a former detention and torture center in Santiago, Chile, activists condemn the brutal Pinochet dictatorship by honoring the memory of victims, allowing the space to emerge as a "park for peace." Throughout the Southern Cone of Latin America, and elsewhere around the globe, carceral sites have been dramatically repurposed into places of enlightenment that offer inspiring allegories of human rights. Interpreting the complexities of those common threads, this book weaves together a broad range of cultural, interdisciplinary, and critical thought to offer new insights into the study of political imprisonment, collective memory, and postconflict societies"--
Format: Book
Language:English
Published / Created: Oakland, California : University of California Press, 2022.
Subjects:
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.

Physical description: xiv, 220 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm

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Contained in: Bastille effect
ISBN:9780520386037
0520386035
Call Number View In Collection
Z12181
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