719035 research-article2017
LAPXXX10.1177/0094582X17719035Latin American PerspectivesTeles / The Araguaia Guerrila War
The Araguaia Guerrilla War (1972–1974) Armed Resistance to the Brazilian Dictatorship by Janaína de Almeida Teles Translated by Andre Pagliarini The Araguaia guerrilla war (1972–1974) was an attempt to reconcile armed struggle and political awareness that became a sort of “guerrilla focus” with roots in the peasant population, which assumed a decisive role in the resistance to military repression. This period was characterized by the centralization of operations of information and repression, consolidating the tactic of “political disappearance” in Brazil. The military occupation terrorized the population to mitigate any multiplier effect of the insurgency, and its success reverberated throughout the continent. At the same time, denunciations of its human rights abuses helped to erode the dictatorship. A guerrilha do Araguaia (1972–1974) representou um esforço para reconciliar a luta armada e a consciência política que se tornou uma espécie de foco de guerrilha com raízes na população campesina, que por sua vez desempenhou papel decisivo na resistência à opressão militar. Esse período caracterizou-se pela centralização das operações de informação e repressão, consolidando a tática de “desaparecimento político” no Brasil. A ocupação militar aterrorizou a população com o propósito de reduzir a possibilidade de insurgência e nesse sentido alcançou sucesso que reverberou por todo continente. Contudo, denúncias das violações de direitos humanos contribuíram para a erosão da ditadura. Keywords: Military dictatorship, Araguaia guerrillas, Political disappearances, Memory, Human rights
The Brazilian dictatorship (1964–1985) was characterized by a strategy of selective repression that oscillated between demonstrative displays and cover-ups of state violence, reflecting the regime’s desire to legitimize itself even as it sought to sow fear. In contrast to the Argentine case, systematic disappearances and killings under torture were carried out in conjunction with the “legalized” imprisonment of thousands of people all over Brazil. In Argentina, the image of the disappeared person and its institutional counterpart, the extermination camps, ceased to be merely forms of repression, becoming instead the repressive modality of power. In the camps the armed forces disappeared dissidents with surgical precision, a tactic deemed necessary to save the nation from “subversion” and establish an Janaína de Almeida Teles is a researcher in the postdoctoral program in social history at the University of São Paulo and received a Fapesp scholarship in 2012-2015. She is the author of Os herdeiros da memória: Os testemunhos e as lutas dos familiares de mortos e desaparecidos políticos no Brasil (2017). Andre Pagliarini is a Ph.D. candidate in Latin American history at Brown University. LATIN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES, Issue XXX, Vol. XX No. XXX, Month 201X, 1–23 DOI: 10.1177/0094582X17719035 © 2017 Latin American Perspectives
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