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Remembering 1968 in Mexico: Elena Poniatowska's La noche de Tlatelolco as Documentary Narrative
Bulletin of Latin American Research, 2005This article considers Elena Poniatowska's La noche de Tlatelolco[Massacre in Mexico] as an example of documentary narrative. It examines the narrative strategies she uses to articulate a tripartite interpretation of the events of 2 October 1968. First, it argues that Poniatowska's text represents the Tlatelolco massacre as a crime against humanity ...
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Shortly before the Mexico Olympics, on 2 October 1968, student demonstrators were shot by the military on Tlatelolco Square in Mexico City, thus ending the local student movement and its mass protests. This paper explores the government's use of anti‐communism to ideologically justify this massacre in the context of the Cold War.
ELISA KRIZA, Kriza, Elisa
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Tlatelolco 1968 in Contemporary Mexican Literature Introduction
Bulletin of Latin American Research, 2005Victoria Carpenter
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Redefining the Outsider: Anti-Communist Narratives and the Student Massacre in Tlatelolco (1968)
2020Elisa Kriza
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The Echo of Tlatelolco in Contemporary Mexican Protest Poetry
The shooting of a student demonstration in La Plaza de las Tres Culturas in the Tlatelolco district of Mexico City on 2 October 1968 has been the subject of many literary works, among which the Tlatelolco poetry addresses not only the event itself but ...
Victoria Carpenter
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1968 Olympic Dreams and Tlatelolco Nightmares: Imagining and Imaging Modernity on Television
Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, 2010Juxtaposing televised news coverage of the 1968 student movements and Olympics in Mexico City, the author examines the mass media's role during this politically volatile year for the country and the world. Through an analysis of news scripts located in Televisa's news archive, the article demonstrates that news executives and government officials ...
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