Artículos de revistas
The Consecration of Political Suffering: Martyrs, heroes and victims in Argentine Political Culture
Fecha
2013-11Registro en:
Catoggio, Maria Soledad; The Consecration of Political Suffering: Martyrs, heroes and victims in Argentine Political Culture; Latin American Studies Association; Journal Of Latin American Studies; 45; 4; 11-2013; 695-719
0022-216X
Autor
Catoggio, Maria Soledad
Resumen
This article addresses the various mechanisms by which the religious figure of the Christian martyr became a useful notion in Argentine political discourse. It argues that the process by which the idea of the ‘martyr’ was secularised and politicised was actually initiated by religious agents themselves. The analysis considers how commemoration initiatives devised by religious agents, social movements and political actors have brought ‘Catholic martyrs’ into the pantheon of national symbols.
It also deals with the various semantic shifts seen in the public discourses of religious agents themselves, shifts that extend the boundaries of an eminently religious category by associating it with other figures in a more specifically political imaginary, such as that of the hero and the victim. The article shows how the political power of the religious figure of the martyr lay in the way various actors could use it to invoke the image of a legitimate and heroic victim of political violence. It thus allowed those actors to sidestep the vexed public question of whether those being commemorated had had any involvement in armed struggle.