Ephemeral Histories
About the Author
Table of Contents
"With a sensitive eye for the ephemeral and the mundane, drawing from a diverse and neglected archive of public life, Trumper tells the story of a creative moment in Chilean and Latin American history, and explains the broad repression that followed it. His innovative approach to the public sphere offers new possibilities for a strongly conceptualized yet empirically rich history of politics and culture."— Pablo A. Piccato, Columbia University
"Trumper innovatively links familiar subjects to trailblazing and absorbing discussions of the UNCTAD building, photography, and posters during Salvador Allende’s “Chilean road to socialism,” providing great insight into the relationship between sociopolitical conflict, visual propellants and manifestations of discourse, and urban space. Ephemeral Histories is an original piece of scholarship that will push historians and other scholars to question some prevailing narratives on Chile during the late 1960s and early 1970s."— Patrick Barr-Melej, Ohio University
Reviews
"With a sensitive eye for the ephemeral and the mundane, drawing from a diverse and neglected archive of public life, Trumper tells the story of a creative moment in Chilean and Latin American history, and explains the broad repression that followed it. His innovative approach to the public sphere offers new possibilities for a strongly conceptualized yet empirically rich history of politics and culture."— Pablo A. Piccato, Columbia University
"Trumper innovatively links familiar subjects to trailblazing and absorbing discussions of the UNCTAD building, photography, and posters during Salvador Allende’s “Chilean road to socialism,” providing great insight into the relationship between sociopolitical conflict, visual propellants and manifestations of discourse, and urban space. Ephemeral Histories is an original piece of scholarship that will push historians and other scholars to question some prevailing narratives on Chile during the late 1960s and early 1970s."— Patrick Barr-Melej, Ohio University
Awards
- 2017 Southern Cone Studies Section at LASA Book Award (Humanities), Latin American Studies Association
- 2018 Best Book Award, Historia Reciente y Memoria Section Award, Latin American Studies Association
- Marysa Navarro Best Book Prize 2017, New England Council of Latin American Studies
- Murdo J. Macleod Book Prize Honorable Mention 2017, Southern Historical Association
- 2018 Best Book Award from the Latin American Studies Association (Historia Reciente y Memoria Section), Latin American Studies Association
- Marysa Navarro Best Book Prize 2017, New England Council of Latin American Studies
- 2017 Murdo J. MacLeod Book Prize Honorable Mention, Southern Historical Association
