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In 1994, as the political and economic elite of the United States, Canada, and Mexico inaugurated the North American Free Trade Agreement, an army of masked guerillas from the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) declared the birth of a new Mexican revolution.
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The MST and the EZLN Struggle for Land: New Forms of Peasant Rebellions [PDF]
In this article, the author reviews some of the conclusions of the literature on peasant rebellions in the light of current land struggles of the Landless Rural Workers' Movement (MST) in Brazil and the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) in Chiapas, Mexico.
Vergara-Camus, L. +1 more
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EZLN: LA TRADUZIONE DI UN NUOVO MONDO [PDF]
Per traduzione possiamo intendere diverse procedure semiotiche quali trasposizione intersemiotica, traduzione interlinguistica, tramutazione, o semplicemente interpretazione, secondo i parametri della semiosi illimitata. Quest’ultima accezione metaforica di traduzione, cioè la semiosi, implica un modello di segno fondato sul rapporto di rinvio ...
BARCHIESI, MARIA AMALIA
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La révolution virtuelle de l' EZLN [PDF]
Busson Maël. La révolution virtuelle de l' EZLN [armée zapatiste de libération nationale]. In: Quaderni, n°39, Automne 1999. Transport matériel et immatériel. pp. 5-10.
Busson, Maël
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Northern Intellectuals and the EZLN
Monthly Review, 1995In recent decades, important trends in social and cultural analysis have been qualified with the prefix "post." Today social scientists, for instance, are expected to know something about poststructuralism, postmodernism, post-Fordism, and even something called post-Marxism.
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The EZLN and Its Emancipatory Road
2018Between 1960 and 1980, under the repressive regime of the PRI that showed its most brutal expression in 1968 on the Plaza de las Tres Culturas at Tlatelolco and the powerful resonance of the Cuban revolution (Castellanos 2007; Pensado 2013; Henson n.d.), dozens of revolutionary groups were formed in Mexico with a common dream: that of social revolution
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Silence, Subalternity, the EZLN, and the Egalitarian Contingency
2014This chapter examines the political implications and cultural effects of the Ejercito Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) in Mexico. It discusses the extent to which the EZLN’s emergence in 1994 has altered the political landscape in Mexico and the Mexican political system.
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The Dynamics of Social Change and Mexico's EZLN
Latin American Perspectives, 2000The wave of democratization that swept across Latin America in the 1980s revived a waning interest in the study of social movements in the region.' By many accounts, this interest has not been dampened by an apparent difficulty in locating and defining, let alone explaining, these movements.
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