“Focusing on Chile, Colombia and Argentina, this outstanding book innovatively challenges the often-unreflective hope that memory can effectively serve as a bulwark against intergenerational cycles of violence. Instead, it proposes that dramatizations of the archive are central to mnemonic stewardship, understood as a curatorial and dynamic, temporally extended project. All in all, a must read for all students of political memory.”—<b>Mihaela Mihai, author of</b>, <i><b>Political Memory and the Aesthetics of Care: The Art of Complicity and Resistance</b></i><br /><br />“Vikki Bell’s prose is beautiful and fluid, and her mastery of the complex subject matter is quite striking for its empathy and humanity.”—<b>Kaitlin M. Murphy, author of</b>, <i><b>Mapping Memory: Visuality, Affect, and Embodied Politics in the Americas</b></i>
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction 1
Part I. Chile
1. Entwined Tellings: Detention and Survival in Pinochet’s Chile 23
2. Paper Afterlives: On the Archive as Biopolitical Remains 51
Part II. Colombia
3. Colombia’s Propositions for Memory: The Spirit of the Archive 89
4. Negotiating the Force of Art: The Work of Erika Diettes 121
Part III. Argentina
5. A Critical Ecology of Practices: Forums and Their Arts of Dramatization 151
6. Risking Images, After All: Art at the Espacio Memoria y Derechos Humanos, Ex-ESMA Argentina 175
Conclusion 203
Notes 211
Bibliography 245
Index 257