Issue 38 Language and Culture

Page 29

NON-WESTERN AMERICAN

ARPIRELLAS AGAINST AUGUSTO Amidst empty streets in a fearful nation, Chilean women met at churches and in neighbours’ houses to stitch compassionately into fabric their accounts of an uncompassionate truth. These pieces documented the realities of life under Pinochet’s military dictatorship and provided the women who made them with a voice, a community, and a means of receiving economic solidarity from abroad. The 1973 US-backed coup d’état carried out by the Chilean military against the democratic socialist government of Salvador Allende was characterised by widespread human rights violations and economic turmoil. In the immediate aftermath of the coup, thousands of activists and trade unionists faced torture and execution. The number of desaparecidos (disappeared) grew to roughly three thousand. Meanwhile the implementation of a neoliberal economic “shock treatment” effected a rise in unemployment, food shortages, and the privatisation of utilities left thousands without water or electricity. Women, many of whom had family among the disappeared and who were amongst the worst hit by the economic and political situation, met in studios organised by the Catholic Church to give a voice to themselves and to the disappeared through scenes sown with fabric scraps onto pieces of burlap. Termed arpilleras, many of these pieces depicted missing loved ones, or women and communities holding signs asking, ‘donde estan?’ (where are they?). By stitching their loved ones’ clothes into their arpilleras, lives and art became inseparable; the bright blue of children’s school uniforms provided the sky under which scenes of social, political and economic oppression took place. Others rendered scenes of solidarity, cooperatives called ‘Comprando Juntos’ (‘Buying Together’), where communities would band together in the face of economic hardship. The church’s ‘Vicariate of Solidarity’ facilitated similar solidarity from those in other countries by selling arpilleras to provide a vital source of income for arpilleristas. Though the production and distribution of arpilleras was outlawed during the regime,

the subversive resistance art continued in secret. Through each piece a voice was aired, and a story was told which resonated with people across the world, and fuelled resistance in Chile. Women’s voices were not just confined to these anonymous and secretive pieces. Women were also at the forefront of the street movement and the ‘Vote No!’ movement that ended the Pinochet regime in 1988. Arpilleras have since inspired similar works in other countries facing systematic oppression, from across South America to Africa and even Northern Ireland.

SARAH CUNDY JUNE 2021  THE MANCHESTER HISTORIAN  29


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ARPIRELLAS AGAINST AUGUSTO

2min
pages 29-30

PUNK: A MUSIC REVOLUTION

4min
page 28

RECLAIMING AUSTRALIA DAY

4min
page 27

IN SEARCH OF ATHENS: ERNEST SIMON’S CAMPAIGN TO

4min
page 25

DID NAZI GERMANY RELY MORE ON COERCION OR CONSENT?

4min
page 23

SOCIAL ANXIETIES SURROUNDING THE MODERN WOMAN IN INTERWAR BRITAIN

4min
page 22

WHAT LED TO THE 19TH CENTURY GAELIC REVIVAL?

4min
page 21

THE EVOLUTION OF DIALECTS WITHIN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

4min
page 20

HOW HAS THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE WILD WEST IMPACTED U.S. CULTURE AND IDENTITY

4min
page 18

THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION THROUGH PICTURES

3min
page 16

EPONYM ETHICS: NAMING INHUMANE MEDICINE

4min
page 19

FROM THE KAMA SUTRA TO NOW: THE IMPACT OF COLONIAL RULE ON SOUTH ASIAN

4min
page 15

HOW THE BIBLE HAS BEEN USED TO OPPRESS WOMEN SINCE THE GARDEN OF EDEN

4min
page 11

MISSIONARIES: COLONIALISM’S ‘AGENT, SCRIBE, AND MORAL ALIBI’?

4min
page 10

HOW HAS THE PUBLIC MEMORY OF THE SECOND SINO-JAPANESE WAR INFLUENCED

4min
page 13

EXPLORING WHY FORENSIC FINGERPRINTING DEVELOPED IN COLONIAL INDIA, AND ITS

4min
page 14

AL-FARABI: THE SECOND TEACHER, FORGOTTEN IN MODERN

4min
page 5

MICHAEL FOUCAULT - RECONCEPTUALISING POWER IN

4min
page 4

ALEXANDER THE GREAT: LGBT ICON?

4min
page 9

HOW DOES LANGUAGE WORK AS A COLONIAL TOOL?

4min
page 3
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