The nostalgia of a sugar cane factory. The beginnings of the repressive process in Santa Lucía, Tucumán (1966-1983)

In this article I intend to analyze the senses about violence that are framed around the closure of the sugar cane factory of Santa Lucia. I understand this event as a part of a long-term repressive process that will have its moment of greatest intensity years later with the Operetivo Independecia (...

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Autor principal: Domínguez, Daniela
Formato: Artículo publishedVersion Peer-reviewed papers text Artículo evaluado por pares texto
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto de Arqueología y Museo, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e IML, Universidad Nacional de Tucumán 2020
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Acceso en línea:http://publicaciones.csnat.unt.edu.ar/index.php/mundodeantes/article/view/13
http://suquia.ffyh.unc.edu.ar/handle/suquia/10012
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Sumario:In this article I intend to analyze the senses about violence that are framed around the closure of the sugar cane factory of Santa Lucia. I understand this event as a part of a long-term repressive process that will have its moment of greatest intensity years later with the Operetivo Independecia (1975) and the military dictatorship (1976-1983). The objective will be to give an account of the meaning that this events have for the people of Santa Lucía, putting on the map another series of edges. This will allow us to think about how state terrorism was planned and executed in the province, giving an account of the particularities of the repressive experience in rural areas in more marginal parts of the country. One of the main conclusionsreached is that the “Operation Independence” and then the military dictatorship of 1976 came to consolidate and deepen a process that had been taking place since the 1960s in Tucumán, with the closure of the mills. However, neither Operativo Independecia nor the last dictatorship inaugurated repression, fear and poverty.