![]() ![]() In April 1983, the first American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors brought together thousands of adult survivors, child survivors, and children of survivors in the largest event of its kind ever held. Based on the literature about generations within memory studies and cultural sociology, a narrative approach for examining generational memories is proposed, and then applied to understand Argentinean and Chilean youths' generational sites. ![]() ![]() The article aims to answer why these different narratives of legacy and rupture emerged in these two contexts. While youth activism in Argentina is narrated from an intergenerational standpoint, Chilean student protests have been framed around a generational breakpoint. The linkage of difficult pasts with cycles of youth mobilization particularly deserves attention. In both countries, youths' generational sites are characterized by strong political mobilization and by dynamics of collectively remembering right-wing dictatorships (in Argentina, from 1976 to 1983 in Chile, from 1973 to 1989). ![]() Recent youth activism in Argentina and Chile provides fertile ground for the exploration of different generational narratives circulating amongst those born in the aftermath of transitions to democracy. This article explores how generational narratives have emerged in the process of democratization in two post-authoritarian countries. ![]()
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